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September/October 2013 www.preview-art.com ALBERTA BRITISH COLUMBIA OREGON WASHINGTON GUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMS Capture Photography Festival Guide
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Page 1: GUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMS - Preview Art Magazine

September/October 2013www.preview-art.com

ALBERTA� � BRITISH COLUMBIA � OREGON � WASHINGTONGUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMS

Capture Photography Festival Guide

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6 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

online• downloadable issues• extra images• searchable listings

www.preview-art.com

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12 Adam FussDouglas Udell Gallery

16 Picturing the Canadian Pacific RailwayWhyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies

18 Charles EdenshawVancouver Art Gallery

24 Wim Blom: Paintings Drawings CollagesIan Tan Gallery

34 Art Perry: Facing Ireland: Irish PortraitsSMASH Gallery of Modern Art

42 David Marshall (1928-2006)Trench Contemporary Art

46 Urban Thunderbirds/Ravens in a Material World

Art Gallery of Greater Victoria

48 Keith Langergraber:Theatre of the Exploding SunKelowna Art Gallery

50 Etsuko Ichikawa: Echo at SatsopDavidson Galleries

52 Jamie Isenstein: Will ReturnDouglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery

58 Mike NelsonContemporary Art Gallery

61 Tony Urquhart: RetrospectiveWinchester Galleries

74 First Light: Regional Group ExhibitionBainbridge Island Museum of Art

78 Buster Simpson//Surveyor Frye Art Museum

11 Alberta28 British Columbia69 Oregon75 Washington

September/October 2013Vol. 27 No.4

ALBERTA 8 Banff, Black Diamond, Calgary 16 Edmonton 20 Lethbridge, Medicine Hat, Red Deer, St. Albert

BRITISH COLUMBIA 20 Abbotsford 22 Bowen Island, Burnaby 23 Campbell River, Castlegar 24 Chilliwack, Coquitlam, Courtenay 26 Fort Langley, Grand Forks, Kamloops, Kaslo, Kelowna 27 Maple Ridge, Nanaimo, Nelson 30 New Westminster, North Vancouver 34 Osoyoos, Penticton 36 Port Alberni, Port Moody, Prince George, Prince Rupert, Qualicum Beach, Richmond 37 Salmon Arm, Salt Spring Island, Sidney, Sooke, Squamish, Sunshine Coast (Roberts Creek, Gibsons, Sechelt) 38 Surrey 39 Tsawwassen, Vancouver 61 Vernon, Victoria 66 West Vancouver, Whistler, White Rock 68 Williams Lake

OREGON 68 Cannon Beach, Marylhurst 70 Portland, Salem

WASHINGTON 72 Bainbridge Island, Bellevue, Bellingham, Everett, Friday Harbor, La Conner, Port Angeles, Seattle 79 Spokane, Tacoma© 1986-2013 Preview Graphics Inc. ISSN 1481-2258

Member of Tourism Vancouver, Tourism Victoria andSeattle’s Convention and Visitors’ Bureau.Reproduction in whole or in part is strictly forbidden.

HEAD OFFICE + CANADIAN EDITORIAL + SALESTEL 604-254-1405 FAX 604-254-1314TOLL FREE 1-877-254-1405E-MAIL [email protected] ADDRESS P.O. Box 549, Station A,Vancouver, BC Canada V6C 2N3Janice Whitehead, PublisherShirley Lum, Listings EditorAnne-Marie St-Laurent, Art Director

U.S. EDITORIAL + SALES OFFICEAllyn Cantor TEL 415-971-8279E-MAIL [email protected] SUBSCRIPTIONS $24

32 Gallery Views54 Conservator’s Corner64 Confessions71 Catalogues of Interest79 Art Services + Materials82 Index of Galleries84 Openings + Events

contents

Printed on FSA approvedand recycled paper

Cover: Adam Fuss, Medusa, from the series Home and the World (2010), gelatinsilver print [Douglas Udell Gallery, Vancouver BC – Oct 5-Nov 2]

vignettes

previews

The views, opinions and positions expressed are those ofthe authors and do not necessarily reflect those of thepublisher. Please note that all gallery particulars are set outas submitted by clients prior to the date of publication.

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Desert Eagle Fine Art604-308-3995 www.deserteaglefineart.comOnline gallery since 1998, specializ-ing in contemporary and traditionalmasterworks from the Americas.Presently featuring new work by Trailof Painted Ponies signature artistWendy Wells-Bailey; visit the web-site to view a full presentation of herwork in resin and on canvas; alsoshowing works by Shirley Thomas,Jeanne Bonine and Fernando VillaLobos, including small paintings andlimited edition prints.

ALBERTA

Whyte Museum ofthe Canadian Rockies111 Bear St 403-762-2291 www.whyte.orgThru Sep 15: daily 9:30am-6pm, Sep16-May 31: daily 10am-5pm. Admis-sion by donation. Sep 7-Nov 12Christine Ford, “Echoes of Home –Art Show & Sale”, landscapes of theCanadian Rocky Mountains created

in oils, acrylics, and pen and ink; MAINGALLERY Thru Oct 13 Picturing theCanadian Pacific Railway, Canadianhistoric treasures and evocative newcontemporary art, features artistsfrom the historic CPR ‘pass program’and includes rarely seen works; Oct18-Jan 26 Pinnacle Perspectives:Celebrating the ACMG’s 50thAnniversary, documents the careersof acclaimed members of the Associ-ation of Canadian Mountain Guides(ACMG), and shares photographs bycurrent mountain guides; Winter inCanada, works by renowned historicand contemporary Canadian artists,on loan from private and public col-lections; RUMMEL ROOM Jewels fromthe Whyte Museum Collections,newly acquired and rarely viewedcherished treasures from thearchives, art, heritage and library col-lections; HERITAGE GALLERY OngoingGateway to the Rockies, history ofthe Canadian Rockies through arti-facts, artworks, archival photo-graphs, recordings and documents.

Bluerock Gallery110 Centre Ave W 403-933-5047 www.bluerockgallery.cadaily 10am-6pm. A destination for

handmade, one-of-a-kind fine art andcraft, we represent close to 200regional artists, most of whom liveand work within 100 miles of thegallery.

Alberta Printmakers’ Societyand Artist Proof Gallery (A/P)2010F 11th St SE 403-287-1056 www.albertaprintmakers.cawed-sat 11am-4pm. Sep 4-Oct 19Guy Langevin, “Falling Angels”,series of figurative mezzotint prints,key elements are movement of thehuman figure, light, shadow andabstraction; Oct 23-Nov 30 RachelDuckhouse, “The Faster, The Deep-er”, prints exploring water flow pat-terns within the city of Calgary, creat-ed during her artist residency at theCity of Calgary’s Watershed+ Pro-gram and Telus Spark; Offsite +15WINDOW EPCOR CENTRE FOR THE PER-FORMING ARTS, 205 8TH AVE SE ThruSep 30 Joel Qualle, “Approval Pend-

ONLINE GALLERY

BANFF

BLACK DIAMOND

CALGARY

8 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

LindsayPark

Calgary

StampedeExhibition &

Park

Prince's IslandPark

Bow River

Elbo

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St. Patrick's Island

CALGARY

CKG/CHRISTINEKLASSEN GALLERY

12th Ave SW

11th Ave SW13th Ave SW

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4th Ave NE3rd Ave NE2nd Ave NE

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Royal Ave SW

Elbow Dr

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EAU CLAIRE

TREPANIERBAER

NEWZONES

PAUL KUHNGLENBOW

FRAMED ON 5TH

ART GALLERYOF CALGARY

WALLACEGALLERIES

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ALBERTA PRINTMAKERSSOCIETY/ARTISTPROOF GALLERY

ESKERFOUNDATION

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� Identifies galleries and museumsopen until 8pm on the First Thursdayof every month. Many galleries hostopening receptions on First Thursdayevenings.

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ing and Not to Scale”, intricatescreenprint navigates the terrainbetween man-made infrastructureand the natural world.

� The Art Gallery of Calgary117 8th Ave SW 403-770-1350 www.artgallerycalgary.orgmon-sat 10am-5pm, first thurs10am-9pm. Admission by donation.Sep 6-Oct 26 Where the Heart is2013, presents views of what ‘home’is – a reflection or a mask of itsinhabitant, a recollection of pastobjects or memories, a feeling or a“sanctuary; “Artificial Turf”, the artistErika Lincoln considers themes of

domesticity in nature through kineticsculpture and responsive installationworks that explore the resourcefuland responsive nature of birds.

CKG / Christine KlassenGallery1021 6th St SW 403-262-1880 www.christineklassengallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm or by appt. Sep12-Oct 12 Brad Woodfin, “Open Sea-sons”, paintings – new series of faunaportraits emerge from backgroundsof black by the Montreal-based artist;Jean-François Gromaire, “LightWithin”, paintings – new abstractworks feature a masterful under-

standing of movement by the Paris-based artist; Oct 17-Nov 16 MichaelLevin, “Momento”, new works incolour from this iconic Canadian pho-tographer; France Jodoin, “Whis-pers”, paintings – latest series ofseascapes with the addition of figuresto the Montreal-based artist’s hall-mark romantic style.

The Collectors’ Gallery of Art1332 9th Ave SE 403-245-8300 www.collectorsgalleryofart.comtues-fri 10am-5:30pm sat 10am-5pm. Sep 21-Oct 15 BewabonShilling, “New Works”; Oct 16-Nov 7“New Acquisitions”, includes worksby Robert Dempster, Kindrie Grove,Arlene Hobbs, Thomas Mower Mar-tin, Raymond Theriault, MargaretShelton, John Snow and C.J. Way.

Design by Brown The Gallery627 Beaver Dam Rd NE403-514-0426 www.designbybrown.catues-sat 11am-5pm. Thru Oct 31“Fall Salon of Represented Artists”,with a focus on contemporary inter-national painters, featuring selectedworks by Wosene Kosrof, BrewsterBrockman, Michael Constantini andSusan Seaberry.

Diana Paul Galleries737 2nd St SW 403-262-9947www.dianapaul.comtues-sat 11am-5pm. Opens Sep 7“Collectors Showcase”, historicalworks, and also works by Nicholasde Grandmaison, A.Y. Jackson, W.J.Philips, J.C. Franchere, Roland Giss-ing, Bruno Cote and others; OpensSep 28 Raphael Montpetit: PremierExhibition, urban landscape and figu-rative paintings by this third generationQuebec artist; Opens Oct 19Ken Gille-spie: Solid Ground, colourist land-scapes.

� Esker Foundation444-1011 9th Ave SE 403-930-2490 www.eskerfoundation.comtues & wed 10am-5pm thurs & fri10am-8pm sat 10am-5pm sun 12-5pm. MAIN GALLERY Sep 28-Dec 22Raymond Boisjoly, Wally Dion,Brenda Draney, Dean Drever, JeffFunnell, Jeffrey Gibson, Alex Janvi-er, Jonathan Jones, Glenn Ligon,Duane Linklater, Kent Monkman,Jude Norris and Krista Belle Stew-art, “Fiction/Non-Fiction”, diverse

10 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

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www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 11

V I G N E T T E S • September/October 2013Alberta WATER INTO ART Art Gallery of Alberta, Edmonton, Jul 20-Nov 24 Thisextraordinary travelling exhibition from the Victoria and AlbertMuseum in London features 100 watercolours produced by lead-ing British artists between 1750 and 1950. Work on view rangesfrom mystical illustrations of angels by William Blake to atmos-pheric landscapes by J.M.W. Turner to detailed nature studies bythe Pre-Raphaelite William Holman Hunt. The show demon-strates the versatility and immediacy of the watercolour medium,and chronicles its emergence as a “national art form” in Britain.

RIVER/WATER Esplanade Art Gallery, Medicine Hat, Aug 24-Oct 12More water, but this time as it flows in the South SaskatchewanRiver rather than across the page. This group show of contempo-rary and historical art reflects on the physical and creative signif-icance of the river to individuals and communities. From paint-ings and drawings to photographs, video and mixed-media instal-lations, River/Water “illuminates” the changing character of theriver through the decades and the seasons, and examines itsimpact on human activities and habitation. Topically, it alsoreflects on recent flooding in southwestern Alberta.

JEAN-FRANÇOIS GROMAIRE: LIGHT WITHIN Christine KlassenGallery, Calgary, Sep 12-Oct 12 Based in the Burgundy region ofFrance, Jean-François Gromaire employs the age-old medium ofoil paint to considerable emotional and aesthetic effect. Hissemi-abstract canvases explore a range of interests and effects,including light and darkness, spatial relations, movement andtexture. Earlier careers as a helicopter pilot and an architect haveprofoundly influenced the ways in which he sees the world andconceives form and space.

FICTION/NON-FICTION Esker Foundation, Calgary, Sep 28-Dec 22 The13 national and international artists represented in this exhibition“challenge and critique mainstream cultural histories.” Workingacross a range of media, from photography and film to painting andsculpture, they explore ideas around the construction of identity,the politics of representation, “interculturalism,” museological andarchival practices, exile, displacement, and contemporary notions ofprogress. Among the stellar line-up are Raymond Boisjoly, BrendaDraney and Duane Linklater.

MARJAN EGGERMONT: ANOTHER PART OF THE FORESTHerringer KissGallery, Calgary, Oct 19-Nov 16 This Netherlands-born, Calgary-based artist explores patinas and imagistic effects achievedthrough working with acid on steel. At the same time, she createscontemporary variations on a proto-Romantic oil painting by the17th-century Dutch artist Paulus Potter. Eggermont travelled toher birth city of Leiden to examine Potter’s work and re-interprethis emotional responses to scenes of “untamed nature.” Ulti-mately, what emerges from her project is a desire to harmonious-ly co-exist with the natural world.

William Blake

Vivian Lindoe / River/Water

Jean-François Gromaire

Brenda Draney / Fiction/Non-Fiction

Marjan Eggermont

Robin LauRence

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practices challenge and critiquecolonial cultural histories; ESKERPROJECT SPACE Thru Dec RaymondBoisjoly.

Framed on Fifth1207 5th Ave NW 403-244-3688 www.framedonfifth.comtues-fri 10am-6pm sat 10am-5pm.Sep 3-28 Jane McQuitty, “Ease-ment”, paintings by University ofCalgary instructor; Oct 1-Nov 2“Rock, Paper, Paint”, PatriciaGustafson, paintings and drawingsinspired by her horses; HannahWhite, abstract stone sculptures.

Glenbow Museum130 9th Ave SE 403-268-4100www.glenbow.orgmon-sat 9am-5pm sun 12-5pm.Admission: adults $14, seniors $10,students/youth $9, family $28, chil-dren under 6 free, members free. Sep7-Jan 5Made in Calgary: The 1980s,third installment in the series, adecade-by-decade overview of the

city’s artistic community, curated byJeffrey Spalding, executive directorof the Museum of Contemporary Art– Calgary; Sep 7-Jan 12 “Transfor-mations: A.Y. Jackson & Otto Dix”,two artists on opposite sides of twoconflicts respond to war and its after-math, featuring nationally importantartworks by Group of Seven memberA.Y. Jackson with significant worksby famed German artist Otto Dix thathave never before been seen in Cana-da, organized by the Canadian WarMuseum; From our Collections: Warin the Trenches, explores the wareffort from perspectives before, dur-ing and after the trench experience inthe form of recruitment posters,flags, uniforms and one of the earliestmemorial poppies made by Canadiansoldiers.

Herringer Kiss Gallery709A 11 Ave SW 403-228-4889 www.herringerkissgallery.comtues-fri 10am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm.Sep 14-Oct 12 Reinhard Skoracki,

“Wanderlust”, sculptures – a series ofprovocative investigations of natureand the nature of man with a healthydose of good humour; Oct 19-Nov 16Marjan Eggermont, “New Work”,works inspired by a Dutch painting bythe artist Paulus Potter, who lived inEggermont’s home town of Leiden in1628, whose work is considered anexample of early Romanticism.

Jarvis Hall Fine Art617 11th Ave SW, Lower Level 403-206-9942 www.jarvishallfineart.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 26-Oct 26Carl White, “New Works”.

� Museum of ContemporaryArt – Calgary

104-800 Macleod Trail S403-262-1737 www.mocacalgary.common-sun 11am-5pm. Admission isfree. Donations welcome. Visit thewebsite for upcoming exhibitioninformation.

12 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

www.douglasudellgallery.com

Adam FussDOUGLAS UDELL GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Oct 5-Nov 2, 2013 Douglas Udell Gallery is presenting

the work of Adam Fuss during Vancouver’s CapturePhotography Festival. Adam Fuss is a British-bornphotographer who has worked in Australia and cur-rently resides in New York. Early experiments withpinhole cameras led him to explore the potential ofother camera-less photographic techniques such as thephotogram. His work is interesting for its simplicity ofmeans.

Fuss deliberately eschews contemporary photogra-phy and the use of film, while at the same time wishingto be considered a contemporary photographer.Rather than using cameras, he employs the alchemy ofphotography development to make pictures that relyon the basic tools of light and light-sensitive materials.Babies, water droplets, christening dresses, snakes,sunflowers, rabbits and human skulls have been placedon sheets of Cibachrome paper in trays of water andbriefly exposed to light. His most memorable imagesmay be those depicting silhouettes of babies moving inshallow pools of water.

Fuss’s work is included in the collections of theMuseum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum ofArt, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Los

Angeles County Museum and London’s Victoria and Albert Museum, among others. His images havebeen described as “profound,” “haunting” and “mysterious.” Mia Johnson

Adam Fuss, Untitled (2012), pigment print [Douglas UdellGallery, Vancouver BC, Oct 5-Nov 2]

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The New Gallery (TNG)208 Centre St SE 403-233-2399 www.thenewgallery.orgtues-fri 11am-5pm sat 12-6pm.Admission is free. +15 Window,Epcor Centre for the PerformingArts, 205 8th Ave SE. MAIN SPACE Sep6-Oct 5 Sam Blanchard, “Older &Overwhelmed”, installation exam-ines the perceived loss of ability thatcomes with aging, includes projec-tion-mapped sculptures and motor-ized components simulating anaging jogger on a morning run; Oct11-Nov 2 Marie-Andrée Houde,“The Screen”, photographs focus on

the touristic infrastructures that existbehind cliché and picturesque post-card settings; Offsite +15 WINDOWThru Sep 28 Marilyn Volkman,“NEOCraft Global: Excerpts from theFuture Archive, Vol. 1”, installationappropriates a department store dis-play window by artist resident at TheNew Gallery’s John Snow House.

Newzones730 11th Ave SW 403-266-1972 www.newzones.comtues-fri 10:30am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm. Sep 21-Oct 19 Franco De-Francesca, “Tune In, Turn On...”,

pigment print on panel with resin –vibrantly-coloured works reflect oncontemporary visual culturecharmed by minimalism and mod-ernism, technology and futurism;Sophie Jodoin, pastel and charcoalon paper – new works on paperexplore how simple objects or fig-ures isolated from context can evokecomplex stories; Oct 26-Nov 23 JohnBarkley, abstract oil on canvas paint-ings about mankind’s tendency toimpose structure on nature, lineageand our desire to frame the cosmos.

Paul Kuhn Gallery724 11th Ave SW 403-263-1162 www.paulkuhngallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm and by appt.Sep 21-Oct 19 John Eisler, “NewWorks”; Mary Shannon Will,“Desert Sky”, new paintings; Oct 26-Nov 16 Mark Mullin, “New Works”.

Stride Art Gallery Association1004 MacLeod Trail SE 403-262-8507 www.stride.ab.caGallery closed until further noticedue to damage from the Jun 2013flood. Visit the website for ongoingupdates.

TrépanierBaer105-999 8th St SW 403-244-2066 www.trepanierbaer.comtues-sat 10:30am-5pm. Opens Sep13 MAIN GALLERY Ryan Sluggett:Instabilities; VIEWING ROOM Made inCalgary (1980-1989): Iain Baxter&,Eric Cameron, Chris Cran, Ron Mop-pett, Carroll Taylor-Lindoe, EvanPenny; Opens Oct 18 Iain Baxter&:Works.

Wallace Galleries500 5th Ave SW 403-262-8050 www.wallacegalleries.common-sat 10am-5:30pm. Sep 5-18“Rotating Group Show, New Works –Fall 1: 2013”, gallery artists includeSylvain Louis-Seize, Gregory Hardy,Diana Zasadny, Shi Le, Barrie Szeke-ly, William Duma, Brent Laycock,Alain Attar and more; Sep 19-25“Rotating Group Show, New Works –Fall 2: 2013”, gallery artists with stylesvarying from abstract to realisminclude Gordon Lewis, Joice Hall,Dori-ann Steinberg, Bruce Head andmore; Sep 28-Oct 9 Harold Town,selection of great works from through-out the artist’s career; Oct 10-23 “FallColours 2013”, works by Simon

14 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

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Andrew, Shi Le, Brent Laycock, Lin-da Nardelli, Shannon Williamsonand more; Oct 26-Nov 6 “The LimnerGroup of Victoria: A Passion for ArtRevisited”, founded by Herbert Siebn-er and spearheaded by Maxwell Bates,inspirational in shaping the Victoria artscene and consequently in WesternCanada, Maxwell Bates, HerbertSiebner, Elza Mayhew, Carole Sabis-ton, Colin Graham, Patricia Martin-Bates, Jan & Helga Grove, Nita For-rest, Walter Dexter, Jack Wilkinson,Richard Ciccimarra, Robert DeCas-tro, Karl Spreitz, Robin Skelton andMyfanwy Pavelic.

Alberta Craft Council Gallery10186 106 St NW 780-488-6611 www.albertacraft.ab.camon-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-6pm. FEATURE GALLERY Thru Sep 28

Hanging By a Thread, textiles tracethe relationship among multiple gen-erations of women; Oct 5-Dec 24 Pot-works, juried exhibition of tablewareand ceramic pieces related to cook-ing, dining and celebration created byAlberta ceramic artists; DISCOVERYGALLERY Sep 14-Oct 19 Dale Lerner,“The Others”, sculptures of mythicalcreatures; Anita Narwrocki, “FROM:Correspondence, TO: TXT”, perspec-tive on the state of written communi-cation; Oct 26-Nov 30 Shona Rae,“Fairy Tales, Folklore, and Mythcom-munications... Part II”, Rae returnsthe fairy tale to the adult world withher sculptural rings; Diane Krys, “Illu-sions, Revelations, Transformations”,fibre arts – a journey in seven stages.

Art Gallery of Alberta2 Sir Winston Churchill Sq780-422-6223 www.youraga.catues-sun 11am-5pm wed 11am-9pmmon closed. Admission: members

free, adults $12.50, seniors (65+)/students $8.50, children under 6 free,children 7-17 $8.50, family (up to 2adults + 4 children) $26.50. Sep 14-Nov 24RBC NEWWORKS GALLERYAaronMunson & David Hoffos: Isachsen1948-1978, a documentary exhibitionand installation that presents the histo-ry of a lone arctic weather station; Sep14-Jan 12 The Intellection of LadySpider House. Valerie Blass, JuliaFeyrer, Hadley+Maxwell, David Hof-fos, Gareth Moore, Hannah Rickards,Ron Tran... A project by GeoffreyFarmer, commissioned to design aninteractive funhouse by the AGA whichwill be constructed in the large thirdfloor gallery in collaboration with otherCanadian and international artists;Thru Oct 6 19th Century British Photo-graphs from the National Gallery ofCanada, well recognized images andthemes from the period; New Acquisi-tions: Views and Vistas, recentlyacquired landscape works by Canadian

EDMONTON

16 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

www.whyte.org

Picturing the Canadian Pacif ic RailwayWHYTE MUSEUM OF THE CANADIAN ROCKIES, BANFF AB – Jun 8-Oct 13, 2013Picturing the Canadian Pacific Railway features work by artists from the historic Canadian Pacific Rail-way pass program, established between 1886 and 1914, together with paintings, drawings and photo-graphs by contemporary artists. The early artworks are similar in type and concept to Vistas: Artists onthe Canadian Pacific Railway (www.preview-art.com/previews/11-2010/cprvistas.html) shown at theReach Gallery Museum, 2010.

At the end of the 19th century, the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) encouraged artists to produce workthat would help promote Western Canada for tourists and potential settlers. Some of the best painters andphotographers of the day were invited toconstruct their pictorial visions of theWest. The results, which captured the hor-rific working conditions and harsh terrainof the land 100 years ago, led to one of themost significant art collections everamassed in Canadian history. The exhi-bition includes a number of rarely dis-played artworks from private and publiccollections, including the Prime Minister’sOffice and the Embassy of Canada inWashington, DC.

The historic artworks are shownalongside those by contemporary artistsMichael Cameron, Karen Maiolo,Ciprian Mureşan, Pascale Ouellet,Craig Richards, Jeffrey Spalding, Peter von Tiesenhausen, Kristopher Weinmann and Paul Wong.The juxtaposition provides an opportunity to compare changing trends in artistic expression and cul-tural norms, as well as ecological changes in the landscape and the growth or demise of small townsbetween Calgary and Glacier House. Mia Johnson

Fredric Martlett Bell-Smith, Trestles at the Loop (1890), watercolour on paper[Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies, Banff AB, Jun 8-Oct 13]

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Adam FussOctober 5 - November 2, 2013

Vancouver’s Capture Photography Festival

D O U G L A S U D E L L G A L L E R Y1 5 6 6 We s t 6 t h A v e V a n c o u v e r, B C V 6 J 1 R 2

www . d o u g l a s u d e l l g a l l e r y . c o m • 6 0 4 - 7 3 6 - 8 9 0 0

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artists; Oct 26-Feb 16 Chagall: Daph-nis & Chloé, 42 full-colour lithographsillustrating Daphnis & Chloé, a famousclassical fable written by the Greekpoet Longus in the 2nd century;Angakkuq: Between Two Worlds;Spiritual and Mythological Figures inInuit and Inuvialuit Art, five decades ofInuit artworks, produced by over 50artists from 22 northern communitiesacross the Canadian Arctic from 1960to 2009; Thru Nov 24 Water Into Art:British Watercolours from the V&A,1750-1950, 100 works on loan fromthe Victoria and Albert Museumincluding small sketches and studiesas well as fully realized works createdbetween 1750 and 1950 by all of theleading painters of this period; ThruSpring 2014 “BMO World of Creativity:Cabinets of Curiosity”, explore thewondrous and curious collection of

local artist Lyndal Osborne, and entera world familiar yet strange; Thru 2014Megan Morman: Now You See It, thewalls of the gallery become a large-scale word search puzzle, designed tobe an interactive game with 280 namesof artists who have work in the AGA’spermanent collection.

Bugera Matheson Gallery10345 124th St 780-482-2854 www.bugeramathesongallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 26-Oct 10“Masculine Intuition”, MorleyMyers, abstract sculptures; JohnKing, abstract paintings; Oct 17-31Ernestine Tahedl, “Terra Incognita”,abstract landscape paintings.

� Daffodil Gallery10412 124th St 780-760-1278 www.daffodilgallery.ca

tues-sat 10:30am-5pm thurs 10:30am-7pm and by appt. Sep 10-28 CatherineMarchand, “Through the Door”, roman-tic realism oil paintings; Oct 3-26 MikeDendy, “Found While Walking”, con-temporary acrylic landscapes.

Douglas Udell Gallery10332 124 St NW 780-488-4445 www.douglasudellgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm. Opens Sep 2846th Annual Fall Show, new acquisi-tions by gallery artists, Canadian his-torical collection, and fresh work by upand coming artists.

West End Gallery12308 Jasper Ave NW 780-488-4892 www.westendgalleryltd.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 14-26 RobertSavignac; Sep 28-Oct 10 Irene Klar;Oct 19-31 Richard Cole.

18 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

www.vanartgallery.bc.ca/�

Charles EdenshawVANCOUVER ART GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Oct 26, 2013-Feb 2, 2014 Haida artist Charles Eden-shaw (ca. 1839-1920) is internationally renowned for his wood carving, argillite and ivory carving,jewellery and painting. He helped pioneer the art of silver and gold engraving through his master-ful use of the formline design system, and remains an iconic, influential figure in Northwest Coast

art today. Edenshaw actively cultivated a market

for his traditional Haida design work, bothamong his own people and among out-siders. He created pieces for ceremoniesand events, as well as tourist pieces. At thebeginning of the 20th century, the Ameri-can Museum of Natural History commis-sioned dozens of pieces, including modeltotem poles and houses, for its collection.Edenshaw’s bracelets, made from gold andsilver coins and exhibiting family crests,were worn by the Haida at a time when theclans’ wrist tattoos were prohibited by mis-sionaries.

In the first major survey of Edenshaw’swork, the Vancouver Art Gallery is show-casing over 200 objects assembled frompublic and private collections. The exhibitis organized around the central themes ofhis work: objects depicting traditional

Haida stories; pieces that demonstrate his refined approach to line and form; and works thatincorporate materials and ideas introduced by Americans and Europeans. The exhibition, organ-ized by the VAG, was curated by Robin K. Wright, director of the Bill Holm Center for the Studyof Northwest Coast Art, and Daina Augaitis, chief curator/associate director of the VAG, withHaida advisers James Hart and Robert Davidson. Mia Johnson

Charles Edenshaw, Platter (pre-1894), argillite [Vancouver Art Gallery,Vancouver BC, Oct 26-Feb 2]

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Southern Alberta Art Gallery601 Third Ave S 403-327-8770www.saag.catues-sat 10am-5pm sun 1-5pm.Admission: general $5, students/seniors $4, groups $3 per person,members & children under 12 free.Sep 28-Nov 24 Monika Sosnowska,new sculptures replicate vendorstands, the original stands were sal-vaged from the Jarmark Europa Stadi-um, destroyed to make way for a newnational stadium that was built in timeto host Euro 2012; Shannon Bool,Simone Gilges, Bernhard Kahrmann,Sanaz Mazinani, Kirstine Roepstorffand Emmy Skensved, “Screen andDécor”, the effect digital media is hav-ing on artmaking is found off thescreen, the use of pattern and orna-ment in the sense of extended motif incontemporary art is understood as anorganizing principle in a world ofexcessive data.

� University of LethbridgeArt Gallery

4401 University DrW600 Centre for the Arts 403-329-2666 www.ulag.caMain Gallery: mon-wed fri 9am-4:30pm thurs 9am-8:30pm, HelenChristou Gallery: daily 8am-9pm.MAIN GALLERY Sep 12-Oct 24 Dr.Soanes’ Odditorium of Wonders,recaptures the spirit and aesthetic ofthe 19th C. dime museum to explorethe boundary between education andamusement, also includes a publica-tion; HELEN CHRISTOU GALLERY ThruOct 25 (tentative), “RubberneckRow”, the act of gawking out of mor-bid curiosity is highlighted, featuringworks by Bill Featherston, JohnWill and Victor Cicansky.

Esplanade Art Gallery401 First St SE 403-502-8786www.esplanade.camon-fri 10am-5pm sat & holidays12-5pm. Thru Oct 12 River/Water,contemporary and historical worksfrom the gallery collection andarchives – paintings, video andinstallation works by Prairie artists,regional historical photographsspanning over 150 years, a large-

scale panorama, postcards, mapsand other documents bring to vividlife the river’s place in the diversity ofhuman history and contemporarylife; Kathy Mann, “Water Paths”,pastels and oil paintings.

Red Deer Museum+ Art Gallery4525 47A Ave 403-309-8405 www.reddeermuseum.common-fri 10am-4:30pm sat & sun 12-4:30pm. Thru Nov 11 James AgrellSmith: A Broader Picture, drawings,paintings and original prints; Sep14-Nov 11 A Friend to All: A Cele-bration of Girl Guides in CentralAlberta.

� Art Gallery of St Albert19 Perron St 780-460-4310 www.ArtGalleryofStAlbert.comtues-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-8pm.Sep 5-28 “Tall Tales”, daydreamsand fables collide with the everydayfeaturing Alysse Bowd, hand-builtceramics, and Wanda Lock, mixed-media works on paper; Oct 3-Nov 2Amanda McCavour and Martina Mac-farlane, “Room”, notions of the homeas both a physical and an emotionalspace.

BRITISHCOLUMBIA

Kariton Art Gallery & Boutique2387 Ware St 604-852-9358 www.abbotsfordartscouncil.orgtues-fri 12-5pm sat-sun 9:30am-4:30pm. Thru Sep 17 FibreSix,“Architextiles”, fibre art pieces thatrepresent both literal and figurativearchitectural themes; Sep 20-Oct 22Fraser Valley Watercolour Society,watercolours offer a wide variety ofstyles and subject matter; Oct 29-Dec 21 Christmas Artisan Gift Fair,group exhibition in multiple medi-ums, one-of-a-kind Christmas giftsand stocking stuffers.

LETHBRIDGE

MEDICINE HAT

RED DEER

ST ALBERT

ABBOTSFORD

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CHRIS LANGSTROTHSeptember 26 - October 10

Two Chairs in Passing, acrylic on canvas, 52" x 48", 2013

Tanners Wharf, oil on canvas on panel, 48" x 36", 2013

Kurbatoff Gallery Contemporary Canadian Art

2435 Granville St. Vancouver BC 604-736-5444Exhibitions on-line: www.kurbatoffgallery.com

ANDY WOOLDRIDGE: Water WorksOctober 24 - November 7

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The Reach GalleryMuseum Abbotsford32388 Veterans Way 604-864-8087 www.thereach.catues wed fri 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pm sat & sun 12-5pm, Admission:free. Sep 26-Jan 5 The Navy: A Cen-tury in Art, paintings of dramaticdepictions by some of Canada’s bestartists capture the Canadian navalexperience in times of war and peace,produced by the Canadian War Muse-um; Virginia Ivanicki, “Flight Wor-thy”, paintings combine the build-ings, terrain and flying machines insurreal aerial vistas, an homage to theairplanes and crews of WWII; A Com-munity At War, military artifacts andarchival photos document the waysin which Abbotsford has been affect-ed by wartime.

Arts Pacific Co-op Gallery587A Artisan Lane, Artisan Square604-947-0489 604-947-2522www.artspacificgallery.comthurs-mon 12-4pm. Sep-Oct “NewWorks” by Bowen Island artistsPierre Beaudry, silver jewellery; JaniCarroll, Pat Durrant and Sheila Vet-ter, fibre arts; Kay Hoffman, photog-raphy; Jane Dunfield, Joyce Laceyand Allison Nixon, painting; JeanneSarich and Catherine Epps, pottery;Gayle Ferguson, wood and glasssconces; David Graff, glass gilding,Sandra Wank, lampwork glass andsilver jewellery; Titania Michniewicz,glass beaded landscape jewellery andacrylic painting on mylar; RussellHackney, ceramics.

Cloudflower Clayworks589 Prometheus Pl, Lower LevelArtisan Square 604-947-2522 [email protected] 12-5pm. Sep-Oct JeanneSarich, “New Work”, functionalstoneware pottery; Rohana Laing,“Dancing in the Rain Forest”, batik;Eileen Fong, new acrylic paintings.

Burnaby Art Gallery6344 Deer Lake Ave 604-297-4422 www.burnabyartgallery.catues-fri 10am-4:30pm sat-sun 12-5pm. Admission is by donation. Sep

6-Nov 17 MAIN FLOOR GALLERY“Storms and Bright Skies: ThreeCenturies of Dutch Landscapes”, inthe landscape tradition of the early17th C., its blossoming during theGolden Age, and its extension intothe 18th and 19th centuries; includesworks by Jan van Goyen, Jacob vanRuisdael and Rembrandt, organizedby the National Gallery of Canada;SECOND FLOOR GALLERY “Inner Realms:Dutch Portraits”, includes drawings,etchings and oils by Rembrandt,Adriaen van Ostade and CornelisJanssens van Ceulen.

Deer Lake GalleryBurnaby Arts Council6584 Deer Lake Ave 604-298-7322 www.burnabyartscouncil.orgtues-fri 12-4pm, open most sat & sunduring exhibitions. Admission is free.Thru Sep 14 Angela Huang and Vic-toria Eftimova-Chowdhury, “Interac-tions and Illusions”, acrylic paintingsthat address the experience of inter-sections of all kinds; Sep 20-Oct 12Gillian Worsley, “Solo Exhibition”;Oct 18-Nov 9 Artist-in-ResidenceProject.

Nikkei National Museum6688 Southoaks Cres 604-777-7000 www.nikkeiplace.orgtues-sun 11am-5pm, closed Dec 23-28. Sep 22-Dec 29 A Call for Justice– Fighting for Japanese CanadianRedress (1977-1988), historic pho-tographs, artifacts, poetry, personalstatements, art and video in honourof the 25th anniversary of the signingof the Redress Agreement with theGovernment of Canada in 1988, thisfirst travelling exhibit celebrates theemotional struggle to achieve anapology and recognition for unjusttreatment from 1942 to 1949; Ongo-ing UPPER LEVEL Taiken – JapaneseCanadians Since 1877, from thehardships of pioneers to the strug-gles of the war years to the Nikkeicommunity today.

Simon Fraser UniversityGalleryAQ 3004-8888 University Dr 778-782-4266 www.sfu.ca/gallerytues-sat 12-5pm, closed sat on holi-day long weekends. Sep 14-Dec 14Samuel Roy-Bois: Not a new world,just an old trick, installation – large-scale model for an imaginary buildingthat connotes an idea of the art gallery

BOWEN ISLAND

BURNABY

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or museum; viewers may climb themodel’s various levels and enter itsinterior, containing objects, books andworks from the SFU art collection.

Campbell River Art Gallery1235 Shoppers Row 250-287-2261 www.crartgallery.catues-sat 12pm-5pm. Thru Sep 13MAIN GALLERY Jeremy Fokkens,“Inspiration”, black and white photo-graphs of the people of Nepal andBangladesh; DISCOVERY GALLERY Kar-

lie King, “Around Home”, ceramictiles that become layered impres-sions of King’s life which currentlycentres around motherhood; Sep 19-Oct 25 MAIN AND DISCOVERY GALLERIESNIC Faculty Exhibition, artwork in avariety of media by nine facultymembers from North Island College-Emily Carr Satellite Campus.

Kootenay Gallery120 Heritage Way 250-365-3337 www.kootenaygallery.com

tues-sat 10am-5pm. Thru Sep 14EAST GALLERY Scot Bullick, “Miscre-ants – Mischievous and Defiant”,mixed-media exhibition tells storiesof mischievousness and defiance;WEST GALLERY Creating Culture,works by six regional Aboriginalartists working in various media; Sep20-Nov 9 EAST & WEST GALLERIESInvested: 10,000 Hours, juried exhi-bition of contemporary craft in a vari-ety of media (ceramic, glass, fibre,metal and wood) by Columbia Basinartists, in celebration of the CraftCouncil of British Columbia’s 40thAnniversary.

CAMPBELL RIVER

CASTLEGAR

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DAVID HAUGHTON FEAR, HOPE, LONGING IINEW PAINTINGS OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST

FLASH EXHIBITION – 3 DAYS ONLYSEPT 27-29, 2013VISUAL SPACE GALLERY2075 ALBERTA ST (AT 5TH AVE)VANCOUVER, BC

VIEW PAINTINGS AT WWW.HAUGHTON-ART.CA

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Chilliwack Visual ArtistsAssociation, Chilliwack ArtGalleryChilliwack Cultural Centre 9201 Corbould St 604-392-8000 www.chilliwackvisualartists.cawed-sat 12-5pm. Thru Sep 7 CVAAGroup Show, “Back to the Garden”,artwork in all media; Sep 12-Oct 26“Earthscapes”, collaborative works,Pat Tessier, digital photography –images cover a wide range of sub-jects; Debbie Weismiller, paintings– the artist is captivated by colourthat provides depth and complexity.

Art Gallery at EvergreenCultural Centre1205 Pinetree Way 604-927-6550 www.evergreenculturalcentre.ca

mon-sat 12-5pm. Admission is free.Sep 12-Nov 7 Unreal, considers con-temporary artists’ explorationsbeyond the rational and looks at theways in which they delve into ideasaround desire, fantasy; MAIN LOBBYSPACE Sep 27-Nov 1 Oliver Hocken-hull, installation – Hockenhull willengage patrons with a projection andthe creation of an intimate cinematicspace – an ever-changing interpreta-tion of Kafka’s “An Imperial Message”.

Place des Arts1120 Brunette Ave 604-664-1636 www.placedesarts.caLeonore Peyton Salon: mon-wed, fri9am-2pm thurs 9am-9pm sat 2:30-5pm sun 1-5pm (call ahead to con-firm viewing availability); Atrium andMezzanine Galleries: mon-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm sun 1-5pm. Sep5-Oct 5 ATRIUM GALLERY Alan Maples,“Colors of Rajasthan”, photography;MEZZANINE GALLERY Place des ArtsTeachers and Staff, “Art Feats”, mul-

tiple media; Sep 5-Nov 10 LEONOREPEYTON SALON Kim Vergil, “OneDay…Week, Month, Year”, mixedmedia.

Comox Valley Art Gallery580 Duncan Ave 250-338-6211 www.comoxvalleyartgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. CONTEMPORARYGALLERY Thru Sep 21 Mark Laver andBrent Bukowski, “Re:Moved”, paint-ings and sculpture; Sep 27-Nov 2Catherine Lavelle and Douglas Senft,“transience + permanence”, sculpture;COMMUNITY GALLERY Thru Sept 21 RonMorrison, “Rust in Remembrance”,watercolour paintings; Sep 27-Nov 2Legacy, open call group show, stu-dent tribute to the late artist DouglasSenft; GEORGE SAWCHUK GALLERY ThruSep 21 Trish Smith, “Windows”,drawings; Sep 27-Nov 2 ShannonMcKirgan, “Domesticated”, drawings.

CHILLIWACK

COQUITLAM

COURTENAY

24 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

www.iantangallery.com

Wim Blom: Paintings Drawings CollagesIAN TAN GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Sep 7-Oct 3, 2013 Ian Tan Gallery presents a beautiful series ofapproximately 20 paintings and pencil drawings by South African-born artist Wim Blom in celebra-tion of the artist’s 86th year. Using egg tempera on panel, oil on canvas, and charcoal, coloured pencilsand graphite, Blom combines classic painting and drawing with the modernism of graphic design.

The images in this exhibit were createdbetween 2006 and 2013.

Blom has a unique realistic style. Hispictures appear straightforward and sin-cere, with unassuming subject matter andsolid planes of background colour. There isno use of photographic language like crop-ping or depth of field, no reflections orcolour casting. The point of view is levelwith the tops of pitchers, bowls and cups,giving them a smooth, designed look. Eventhe colours are subdued. It is very coolwork, very methodical – a clean architec-ture of simple objects on simple groundsthat radiate a sense of timelessness.

Blom received his fine arts degrees fromthe University of the Witwatersrand inJohannesburg, and did post-graduate workat the University of Edinburgh, Scotland,

and the University of Perugia, Italy. He taught at the University of the Witwatersrand and the Johan-nesburg School of Art. After immigrating to Canada, he was a curator at the National Gallery ofCanada before becoming a full-time painter. Now living on Salt Spring Island, he has exhibited exten-sively internationally and is represented in major collections worldwide. Mia Johnson

Wim Blom,Table in Sunlight (2013), oil on canvas [Ian Tan Gallery,Vancouver BC, Sep 7-Oct 3]

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The Fort Gallery9048 Glover Rd 604-888-7411 www.fortgallery.cawed-sun 12-5pm. Thru Sep 8 FionaHowarth, “Sublimity: Iceland andGreenland”, recent photography;Sep 11-29 Veronica Plewman andKristen Krimmel, recent paintings;Oct 2-20 Doris Auxier and EdithKrause, recent works; Oct 23-Nov10 Judy Jones and Dorthe Eisen-hardt, “Up on the Beach”, recentfused glass and paintings.

Gallery 2, Grand Forks andDistrict Art and Heritage Centre524 Central Ave 250-442-2211 www.gallery2grandforks.catues-fri 10am-4pm sat 10am-3pm.Thru Oct 19 Beverley Reid, “Hang-ing by a Thread”, fabric art and workson paper.

� Kamloops Art Gallery101-465 Victoria St 250-377-2400 www.kag.bc.camon-wed, fri-sat 10am-5pm thurs10am-9pm sun 12-4pm closed statholidays. Thru Sep 7 Beat Nation:Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture,jjuxtaposing hip hop and other formsof urban youth culture with Aboriginalidentity, the artists create surprisingnew cultural hybrids in painting,sculpture, installation, performanceand video; THE CUBE Elizabeth Warn-er, “Strings”, installation of meticu-lously constructed marionettes and avideo projection of marionettes per-forming in a surreal world; Sep 21-Nov 2 “Monumental Ideas in Minia-ture Books”, international collectionof handmade artists’ books includeswork by Kamloops-based artist Dar-lene Kalynka, illustrative works, visu-al and written narratives, poetry andhumour, showcasing a wide range ofprintmaking techniques; Oct 19-Dec31 “Landscape Revised”, AltheaThauberger, Donald Lawrence,Mark Soo and Jin-me Yoon addressthe history of landscape paintingthrough video, installation, painting,performance and photography; Into

The Woods: Etchings by GeorgeRaab, digital photographs are thefoundation for intaglio prints usingcontemporary and traditional print-making technologies.

Kamloops Arts CouncilMain Gallery7 Seymour St W 250-573-2969www.budreau.catues-fri 10am-5pm sat 10am-4pm.Admission is free. Oct 5-26 MairiBudreau, “Walks of Life – SignificantPeople of Kamloops”, oil on canvasportraits include Lieutenant Gover-nor Judy Guichon, Mark Madryga,Mark Recchi and others.

Langham Cultural CentreGallery447 A Ave 250-353-2661www.thelangham.cathurs-sun 1-4pm. Admission bydonation. Thru Oct 6 Bracken HanuseCorlett, “Wuulhu: To Fuse Together”,new works in painting, drawing andsculpture, digital media and sound;Oct-Nov Paul Walde, “Requiem for aGlacier”.

� Alternator Centre forContemporary Art

103-421 Cawston Ave, Rotary Centrefor the Arts 250-868-2298 www.alternatorgallery.com

tues, wed, sat 11am-5pm thurs & fri1-8pm. Visit the website for exhibitioninformation.

ARTE funktionalThe Factory, 1302 St Paul St250-540-4249 www.artefunktional.comtues-fri 10am-4pm. Art dealer onpremises wed and thurs. NewGallery Opens Oct 2 Located at TheFactory, this modern and contempo-rary art gallery owned by artist Car-olina Sanchez de Bustamante fea-tures established and emergingartists with original work in differentmedia, including abstract painting,sculpture and textile, and functionalart in ceramic, glass and mixedmedia, and the promotion and instal-lation of architectural art. Also featur-ing rotating exhibitions throughoutthe year.

Geert Maas SculptureGardens and Gallery250 Reynolds Rd 250-860-7012www.geertmaas.orgmon-sat 10am-5pm, sun by chance.Internationally acclaimed artist GeertMaas invites the public to visit hisexceptional sculpture gardens andindoor gallery, with one of the largestcollections of bronze sculpture inCanada; changing exhibitions, Maascreates distinctive, rounded, semi-abstract figures, architectural struc-tures as well as installations in a widevariety of materials, including bronze,stainless steel, aluminum, wood,stoneware and multi-media. The greatdiversity of outdoor art is comple-mented in the gallery by an over-whelming number of paintings, seri-graphs, medals, reliefs and sculpturesin various media.

Hambleton Galleries1290 Ellis St 250-860-2498 www.hambletongalleries.comtues-sat 10am-5pm, sun & mon byappt. Sep 19-Oct 1 Robert Genn andSara Genn, show and sale of worksfrom recent travels; Oct 3-19 RickBond and Nancy Lucas, show andsale of new works.

� Kelowna Art Gallery1315 Water St 250-762-2226 www.kelownaartgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pm sun 1-4pm. Thru Sep 29 Dou-glas Walker: Other Worlds, giant

FORT LANGLEY

GRAND FORKS

KAMLOOPS

KASLO

KELOWNA

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painted piece features a depiction ofa whale, a planet and a mask/facethat completely fills the 78-ft-longeast wall of the gallery space;Stephen Foster, “Re-Mediating Cur-tis: Toy Portraits”, features 3-D pho-tographs in back-lit light boxesexploring depictions of indigenouspeople with reference to Americanphotographer Edward S. Curtis;ThruSpring 2014 Artist’s Garden Project,Kyle Zsombor: A Green Desire,installation features a vertical garden(also known as a living wall) on thenorth-facing wall of our courtyardspace and a planted arbor of clus-tered pillars in the centre of thespace; Oct 5-Dec 22 Keith Langer-graber: Theatre of the ExplodingSun, focus on the three-part filmTime Traveller Trilogy, also includessculptural elements and two suites ofdrawings/works on paper exploringsci-fi culture; SATELLITE GALLERY AT THEKELOWNA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ThruNov 4Wanda Lock: Flying Machinesand Poems Sung by Strangers,long, colourful mural combiningimages of airplanes, spaceships,TIE Fighters (from the Star Warsmovies), with various lines fromsongs that relate to flying.

Maple Ridge Art Gallery11944 Haney Pl 604-476-4240 www.theactmapleridge.orgtues-sat 11am-4pm. Sep 7-Nov 9“Celebrate Craft!”, features 12 out-standing BC artists, including JudithBurke, clay, Barbara Heller, tapes-try, Michelle Sirois-Silver, fibre art,and Junichi Tanaka, clay, salutingthe 40th anniversary of the BC CraftsCouncil.

Nanaimo Art GalleryCampus Gallery: 900 Fifth St 2nd location, Downtown Gallery:150 Commercial St250-740-6350 250-754-1750www.nanaimoartgallery.comCampus: mon-fri 10am-5pm sat 12-4pm; Downtown: tues-sat 10am-5pm. CAMPUS Sep 20-Jan 11 TheClaim – The Bomford Brothers;DOWNTOWN Thru Sep 8 Chris Lind-say, “Another Good Question”, the

artwork forces a new path throughthe gallery by moving off the gallerywalls into the spaces frequentlyunaddressed; Kaleidoscope BMOArt Camps Summer Exhibition,works by artists ages 5-16; Sep 13-Nov 23 Rhythmically Repeated:Alistair Bell, new acquisitions.

Craft Connection & Gallery 378378 Baker St 250-352-3006 www.craftconnection.orgmon-sat 9:30am-5:30pm. Sep Rachel

Yoder – Iterations, abstract paintings– Yoder relies on the grid, structureand colour of the work to create a visu-al language of her own; previously shewas a carpenter who built houses for25 years; Oct Group Show, works bygallery artists.

Oxygen Art Centre3-320 Vernon St (Alley Entrance)250-352-6322 www.oxygenartcentre.orgfri 8-10pm sat & sun 3-5pm. Sep 27-29 Inken Hemsen, “Sense TracksElements”, mixed media by artist-in-residence Hemsen.

MAPLE RIDGE

NANAIMO

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V IGNETT ES •September/October 2013British Columbia

KRISTOFF STEINRUCK: THE MARBLE RANGE Vernon Public ArtGallery, Vernon, Aug 1-Oct 10 Stimulated by his interest in thelimestone deposits in the Marble Range mountains near CacheCreek, BC, Steinruck focuses on the area’s unusual geomorphol-ogy while also meditating on the nature of time – human andgeological. His installation includes photographs, hand-carvedstone “crystals” and a single-channel video projection.

YUICHI TAKASAKA: FIRES IN THE NORTH Art Beatus, Vancouver,Aug 23-Oct 18 This Japanese-Canadian photographer spent sev-en years in Yellowknife, where he became enthralled with thephenomenon of the northern lights. Although Takasaka is nowbased in Lumby, BC, he returns to the North each year to pursuehis love affair with the aurora borealis. His dazzlingly beautifulcolour photos of this subject have been exhibited internationallyand published in magazines, newspapers, books, films andDVDs, and on the Internet.

STORMS AND BRIGHT SKIES/INNER REALMS Burnaby Art Gallery,Burnaby, Sep 6-Nov 17 Two complementary exhibitions of historicDutch art launch the fall season at the Burnaby Art Gallery. Thefirst, Storms and Bright Skies, organized by the National Gallery ofCanada, is composed of some 60 works on paper and representsthe emergence of the landscape as a resonant and symbolic subjectfrom the Dutch Golden Age to the 19th century. Jan van Goyen,Jacob van Ruisdael and Rembrandt van Rijn are among therevered artists represented. The second show, on loan from theArt Gallery of Greater Victoria, examines the portrait subject inDutch art and includes drawings, etchings and oil paintings.

ANN VANDERVELDE: NEW WORKS Petley Jones Gallery, Vancouver,Sep 12-26 Many of the mixed-media paintings by this Washing-ton State artist can be seen as highly abstracted visions of the land-scape. These works – subtitled “A Pool of Life Reflecting Water”– play with form, colour, texture and light to evoke different read-ings at different times and to suggest an evolving condition, bothcreative and philosophical. Vandervelde encourages individualinterpretation, writing that “a painting has a life that draws uponothers’ experiences, and that is what makes it so powerful.”

JOHN WYNNE: ANSPAYAXW Satellite Gallery, Vancouver, Sept 13-Oct 26 This immersive sound and photographic installation,organized by the UBC Museum of Anthropology, catches ele-ments of Gitxsanimaax, an endangered indigenous language,through remembrances, songs and oral histories recounted byvillage elders. Wynne, a Canadian sound artist based in London,UK, has collaborated with linguist Tyler Peterson, artist/pho-tographer Denise Hawrysio and members of the Gitxsan com-munity at Anspayaxw (Kispiox) in northern BC to create a com-plex and engrossing work.

Kristoff Steinruck

Yuichi Takasaka

John Wynne

Ann Vandervelde

Robin LauRence

Rembrandt van Rijn

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Vignettes • September/October 2013

British Columbia

DANA CLAXTON: INDIAN CANDYWinsor Gallery, Vancouver, Sep 19-Nov 2 In her new series of large-scale colour photos, multi-mediaartist Dana Claxton investigates the Wild West archive, usingwritten records to allude to the roles played by a cast of historicand modern characters, from Annie Oakley and Buffalo Bill Codyto Sitting Bull and Jay Silverheels (a.k.a. Tonto). Claxton has alsobeen working with video footage of ancient imagery, shot atsouthern Alberta’s Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park. Powerfulironies abound in her use of juicy colours and seductive tech-niques to address serious and sometimes dire histories.

THE VOYAGE, OR THREE YEARS AT SEA PART VI Charles H. ScottGallery, Vancouver, Sep 25-Nov 24 This is the sixth and final “log”in the Gallery’s series of exhibitions exploring our relationship tothe sea. The local and international contemporary artists repre-sented here – Marcus Coates, Beau Dick, Angus Ferguson, GlennKaino, Sean Lynch and Duke Riley – use their wide-rangingapproaches to examine “sea lore.” The show sails from accountsof 16th-century Turkish pirate Piri Reis to false maps of a mythi-cal island off Ireland and on to the chapter in Bram Stoker’s Drac-ula in which the vampire preys on the ship’s crew. Archival mate-rials complement the contemporary artworks.

OLIVER HOCKENHULL Evergreen Cultural Centre Lobby, Coquitlam,Sep 27-Nov 1 This new-media artist, best known for his visionaryfilm projects, has created an interactive digital installation in whichwords and cosmological images are projected in ever-changingconfigurations. Hockenhull uses as his starting point Franz Kafka’sparable, “The Imperial Message”, to investigate the nature ofthought, the creation of meaning and the relationship between theindividual and society. Hockenhull’s exhibit is part of a Tri-Citiesart celebration on the theme of digital art and literature.

GREG GORMAN: PORTRAITS Pendulum Gallery, Vancouver, Sep 30-Oct 16 Angeleno Greg Gorman says that “a great photographasks as many questions as it answers.” The questions posed by hisblack-and-white prints have to do with the nature of celebrity andour desire to see through the public persona of entertainers to theprivate individuals within. Gorman’s highly considered portraitsof actors and musicians, young and old, hot and cool, evoke char-acter while deploying elements of both mystery and revelation.

KIMSOOJA: UNFOLDING Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, Oct 11-Jan 26 This exhibition surveys three decades of work by theinternationally acclaimed artist Kimsooja. Born in Taegui,Korea, and based in New York and Paris, she draws on the tradi-tions of her homeland and the cultural practices of her adoptedcities to create innovative, textile-based art in two and threedimensions. One of Kimsooja’s characteristic strategies is towrap ordinary objects in colourful bed covers, alluding to theKorean tradition of bottari and calling up issues of migration,social change and shifting cultural identity.

Glenn Kaino / The Voyage

Oliver Hockenhull

Greg Gorman

Kimsooja

Robin LauRence

Dana Claxton

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Touchstones Nelson: Museumof Art and History502 Vernon St 250-352-9813 www.touchstonesnelson.cawed fri sat 10am-5pm sun 12-4pm,thurs 10am-5pm, 5-8pm by dona-tion. Thru Sept 8 City in Flames: AJourney Through Nelson’s Fire His-tory tells the story of fires that havechanged lives and transformed thecommunity over the decades, also alook at changes in firefighting meth-ods and equipment; Sep 14-Nov 17Nelson at War, historic photos andnews clippings and artifacts, such asa scale model of the HMS Formida-ble, the aircraft carrier from whichHampton Gray flew his final ill-fatedmission in the dying hours of WWII;Thru Sept 15 Peter Corbett andGlenn Clark, “Abandoning Paradise:The Northern Gateway Project”, pleinair sketches and studio paintings oflandscapes in Northern BC thatwould be impacted by the proposedNorthern Gateway Pipline; Sep 21-Nov 17 Susan Andrews Grace,“Underwritten”, mixed-media instal-lation – Grace explores the corporealand spiritual dimensions of life,death and the afterlife.

Amelia Douglas Gallery,Douglas College, 700 Royal Ave604-527-5723 douglas.bc.ca/visitors/art-gallery.htmlmon-fri 10am-7:30pm sat 11am-4pm. Sep 12-Nov 1 Curbside: Digi-tal Art by Ron Sangha.

Arts Council Gallery of NewWestminsterQueens Park, 6th & McBride Blvd604-525-3244 www.artscouncilnewwest.orgtues-sun 1-5pm, Sep 3-29 PassionateOutdoor Painters with Artists JaneAppleby, Sue Cowan, Sahar McCul-lough, Sally Turton, Alison White andRandy Green; Oct 1-26 NasserGhaderi; Oct 29-Nov 23 Larry Tillyer.

Artemis Gallery104C-4390 Gallant Ave 778-233-9805 www.artemisgallery.catues-sun 12-5pm. Sep 6-22 Cather-ine Fraser, “High Colour”, new paint-

ings – acrylic on canvas, vivid, origi-nal colourscapes; Oct 19-Nov 10Leonid Rozenberg, “Liminal Means”,mixed media/assemblage installation,“Lim·i·nal: Transitional or initial stageof a process; Position at, or on bothsides of a boundary or threshold”.

CAFCA: Café forContemporary Art138-140 E Esplanade778-340-3379 604-505-7261www.cafeforcontemporaryart.common-fri 8am-4pm, sat sun & holi-days 10am-4pm. Sep 7-Oct 4 Key-van Mahjoor, “Of Myths and theirCreators”, pen and ink illustrationson paper revive classic mythologicalsymbols and motifs in a contempo-rary context; Oct 18-Nov 15MichaelLove, “The Long Wait”, photographs– documentation of the 12 militarybases in Germany occupied by NATOduring the Cold War era, part of theCapture Photography Festival.

� Caroun Art Gallery1403 Bewicke Ave 778-372-0765 www.Caroun.nettues-sun 12-8pm. Sep 1-14 AhmadHessami, paintings; Sep 17-27 In

NEW WESTMINSTER

NORTH VANCOUVER

30 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

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Memory of “Morteza KhanAli”, car-toons; Oct 1-14 Iwan Gwen, Jen-nifer Garant, Saeide Tarkashvand,Shimiey, Shabnam Tolou, FarhadVarasteh, Kaveh Rasouli and SaharSeyedi, “Fall Group Exhibition”; Oct16-29 Group Exhibition.

CityScape Community ArtSpace, North Vancouver Com-munity Arts Council335 Lonsdale Ave 604-988-6844 www.nvartscouncil.caCityscape: tues-sat 12-5pm, DistrictFoyer Gallery, North Vancouver Dis-trict Hall: mon-fri 8am-4:30pm, Dis-trict Library Gallery, Lynn Valley MainLibrary: mon-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm sun 12-5pm. CITYSCAPE Thru Sep7 Surface Design Association Mem-bers, “Talking Heads: A Contempo-rary Take on Headdresses”, diversetechniques and innovative approach-es inspired by historical and culturalheaddresses; Sep 13-Oct 5 ArtRental Show, artwork available forrent or purchase; Oct 11-Nov 16Pushing Boundaries 2013, works byFirst Nations artists wth a contempo-rary edge created with traditionalmedia; DISTRICT FOYER GALLERY, DIS-

TRICT HALL OF NORTH VANCOUVER, 355 WQueens Rd, North Van Sep 4-Oct 29Miyuki Shinkai, glass installationthat incorporates other media suchas wood, painting, paper and foundobjects; Jeff Wilson, realist acrylicpaintings explore a range of Canadianand Scottish urban and rural narra-tives; Oct 30-Jan 7 Sarah Northcott,abstract paintings using a uniqueprocess of pouring, dripping andspraying gel over acrylics; DianeEspiritu, ceramic pillow formssculpted to resemble tufted textile;DISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY, LYNN VALLEYMAIN LIBRARY, 1277 Lynn Valley Rd,North Van; Thru Sep 17 TinaTownsend, bold landscape paintingscreated with fluid strokes; Sep 18-Nov 5 Christine Breakell-Lee, paint-ings evoke a spectrum of emotion.

Gordon Smith Galleryof Canadian Art2121 Lonsdale Ave 604-998-8562 www.gordonsmithgallery.cawed-fri 12-5pm sat 10:30am-3pmclosed holidays. Thru Oct 8 Galleryclosed; Opens Oct 9 Michael Snow,“Figure and Frame”, part of CapturePhotography Festival.

Graffiti Co. Art Studio/Gallery171 E 1st St, Upper Flr 604-980-1699 www.graffiticoart.comwed-fri 1:30-6pm sat 1-5pm or byappt/closed Labour Day weekend.Studio/gallery offering original fineart located on the scenic North Shoreclose to Lonsdale Quay. Thru Sep 27Colored Abstract. Works by Dr. KamFilsoufi; Oct 9-25 Fall Group Exhibi-tion, works by various artists.

Presentation House Gallery333 Chesterfield Ave 604-986-1351 www.presentationhousegallery.orgwed-sun 12-5pm. Sep 12-Oct 27 Col-lected Shadows, Photographs fromthe Archive of Modern Conflict,curated by Timothy Prus; AnotherHappy Day, Found Photographs fromthe Collection of Jonah Samson.

Seymour Art Gallery4360 Gallant Ave 604-924-1378 www.seymourartgallery.comdaily 10am-5pm. Thru Sep 7 LukeParnell, “Transformation and Renew-al”, three works comment on repatri-ation of cultural remains, culturalidentity, and the survival and transfor-mation of First Nations culture and its

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 31

DAVID TYCHO | FINE ART www.tychoart.com

Urban Rhythms #6 acrylic on canvas 36 x 36 inches 2013

#430 - 1000 Parker Street Vancouver BC • by appointment only e-mail [email protected] • tel. 604.733.6945

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32 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

GALLERY VIEWS BY MARYSE DE LA [email protected]

Visual Artists as Entrepreneurs and Marketers

“Plumbers and electricians attend programs where up to 30% of their study is devoted to busi-ness development, while students in visual arts get almost no training,” says Chris Tyrell Lor-anger, author of Artist Survival Skills: How to Make a Living as a Canadian Visual Artist (2008) andMaking It! Case Studies of Successful Canadian Visual Artists (2011) and instructor of professionaldevelopment (Continuing Studies) at EmilyCarr University of Art + Design (Van-couver). Tyrell Loranger suggests visualartists need to view business development asessential to their artistic practice.

He also advises new artists to abandon fan-tasies of being represented by a gallery. Even ifthey manage to get noticed in a demandingmarket for galleries, the relationship betweenartist and gallery can be challenging. Thenotion that the artist produces works followedby the gallery’s selling them and then payingdazzling amounts of money back to the artistwhile both parties sing “Hallelujah” is false.

No artist, emerging or established, can afford to get complacent. Michal Tkachenko, primarilyan oil painter, has created her own market – twice – without gallery representation. Self-describedas an emerging to middle career artist, Tkachenko, as part of her marketing strategy, obtained amaster’s degree in fine arts from England’s Chelsea College of Art and Design, since she’d noticedsuccessful artists whose work she admired had that qualification.

Now based both in Vancouver, Canada, and London, England, Tkachenko notes there are dif-ferences between her two markets. “In Vancouver, my landscapes are more popular and saleable,while in London, they like my edgier material.”

Mia Weinberg, an artist who has established a reputation for her public sculptural installationswhich are site- and community-specific, says, “Art is a business for me. It’s how I make my living.I need to be serious, about getting out there and letting people know about me and my work.”

After a previous career in industrial manufacturing, graduation from Emily Carr University,and almost 20 years of submitting work for competitions, Weinberg has expanded the market forher artwork to the real estate development community, where she currently has a commission for apublic installation.

She estimates about 50% of her time is spent on marketing and business development. She hasa focused approach to networking both inside and outside the artistic community. Weinbergbelongs to local chapters of the High Output Business Network and Rapid Time Networks,where she is one of a few artists mingling with business owners.

There are many approaches to networking and market development. Mikey (Michael EdwardMiller), a newly emerging artist, has been exhibiting for approximately 12 months. He creates nostal-gic images in mixed media, based on video games from the 1980s and 1990s, and he uses social mediasuch as Twitter and Facebook to network extensively while developing his market. In June 2013, heheld his Punch Out! show in Los Angeles, which was self-funded and crowdfunded on Indiegogo.

As Tyrell Loranger might point out to his students, not one of these artists is hiding in a studiowaiting for someone to notice them. In fact, Mikey is currently preparing for a September 2013 PunchOut! show in Vancouver, while Weinberg has started a new business, Art Consulting Vancouver, andTkachenko has plans to start an online business helping artists to create online presences.

Bonus material online.

Mia Weinberg, We Are Here, at the Muttart Conservatory in Edmonton

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Swimmer

Pacific Spirit

Bob Sutherland sculptorT 1-604-986-5542C 1-604-754-1417

cast at MAIDEN FOUNDRY • Sandy, Oregon U.S.A. • 1-800-422-8852

BOBSUTHERLAND

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interface with non-aboriginal cultures;Sep 10-Oct 5 Art Party!, juriedfundraising exhibition features estab-lished and emerging artists with workin all media for sale at $300, $200 or$100; Oct 9-Nov 16Sean Karemaker,Sarah Leavitt, Miriam Libicki,Megan Speers, Jason Turner andColin Upton, “biographic: autobiogra-phy in comics”, six Metro Vancouverartists, using different art techniquesand style, tell their personal storiesthrough comics.

SPACE emmarts1432 Rupert St 604-770-2545 www.emmarts.cawed and fri 2-5pm & by appt. Sep-Oct Gabriele Maurus, “New Works”,oil on paper.

Osoyoos Art Gallery8711 Main St 250-495-2800 www.osoyoosarts.comtues-sat 12-4pm. Sep 7-Oct 5Osoyoos

Painters Show, paintings for show andsale by local painters club artists; Oct12-Nov 9 Alan Wylie, paintings.

The Lloyd Gallery18 Front St 250-492-4484 www.lloydgallery.common-sat 10am-5:30pm. Exhibitinggallery artists Irvine Adams, LailaCampbell, Rod Charlesworth, Con-nor Charlesworth, Glenn Clark,Peter Corbett, Jan Crawford, JosetteDe Roussy, Serge Dubé, ValerieEibner, Shannon Ford, Jim Glenn,Perry Haddock, Julia Hargreaves,Frances Harris, Anne-Marie Har-vey, Erika Hawkes, Kevin Healy,Michael Hermesh, Beverly Inkster,Therese Johnston, Bob Kebic,Dongmin Lai, Robyn Lake, GerdaLattey, Julie Mai, Viv McElgunn-Lieskovski, Angie Roth McIntosh,Min Ma, Ingrid Mann-Willis, Deb-bie Milner, Dominic Modlinski, ToniOnley, Diane Paton Peel, Graham

Pettman, Lance Regan, John Revill,Bonnie Roberts, Anita Skinner,Theo Tobiasse, Marla Wilson, NelWitteman, Annette Witteman, Mar-jolein Witteman, William Watt,Ingrid Mann-Willis and Robert Wood.

Penticton Art Gallery199 Marina Way 250-493-2928 www.pentictonartgallery.comtues-fri 10am-6pm sat & sun 12-5pm.Sep 20-Nov 10 MAIN GALLERY JohnKoerner, R.C.A.: The Hidden Side ofNature – A Centennial Celebration,celebrating the 100th birthday of JohnKoerner (born Sep 29, 1913), the old-est living and still active painter work-ing in Canada today; PROJECT ROOMLaura Widmer: The Character ofLine, series of larger-than-life por-traits – lithographs, linocuts anddrawings depict some of the people inthe artist’s life; TONI ONLEY GALLERYBeyond Words: Art Therapy and Men-tal Health, explores the complex andoften misunderstood world of thosewho suffer from mental illness and/orpsychological trauma, presented with

OSOYOOS

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34 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

www.smashmodernart.com

Art Perry: Facing Ireland: Irish PortraitsSMASH GALLERY OF MODERN ART, VANCOUVER BC – OCT 18-NOV 16, 2013 Art Perry is an associ-ate professor in critical and cultural studies at Emily Carr University of Art + Design and a formidable cul-

tural photographer. His picturesfrom Europe have captured peoplein the streets, markets and pubs.The seemingly casual shots belie awealth of emotions – surprise,humour, wariness, sorrow and mer-riment among them – and expose aglobal sense of common humanitywherever he takes them. They areboth humble and humbling.

His popular 2012 travellingphoto exhibition, HIP! Portraits ofCool, contained over 40 portraitsof counterculture icons such asLou Reed, Patti Smith, WernerHerzog and Dizzy Gillespie.

In a new series of photos andwriting entitled Ireland: Little Histories, Perry shares a seven-year project celebrating the stories, music,politics and faith that shape what he describes as “the mysterious entity called Irishness … the beauti-cians, butchers and boat builders who expose the cosmos in the common.” The photos of Irish people,taken across Ireland in homes and cemeteries, at schools and fairs, at markets and horse races, areuncontrived, raw and spontaneous. Many feature children, while others capture the “travellers,” ornomads, of Ireland and Orangemen on parade. Mia Johnson

Art Perry, Saint Patrick's Purgatory, Station Island, Lough Derg, Co. Donegal (2000),fibre-based silverprint [SMASH Gallery of Modern Art, Vancouver BC, Oct 18-Nov 16]

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ROBERT GENN and SARA GENNshow and sale of work from recent travelsSeptember 19 – October 1, 2013 • Reception: September 19, 5:30 - 8:00

RICK BOND and NANCY LUCASshow and sale of new worksOctober 3 – 19, 2013 • Reception: October 3, Thursday, 5:30 - 8:00

Sara Genn, Sampans On the Yangtze, 10" x 14", acrylic on linen

Robert Genn SFCA, Chatterbox Falls High Water, 24" x 30",acrylic on canvas

Nancy Lucas, Tulip Fields, 15"x30", acrylic on canvas

Rick Bond AFCA, Calvert Island Surf, 40"x60",acrylic on canvas

Hambleton Galleries1290 Ellis Street, Kelowna • 250-860-2498www.hambletongalleries.com Celebrating 50 years in business selling art

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the South Okanagan Mental Healthand Addictions Services and the BCSchizophrenia Society.

DRAW Gallery4529 Melrose St250-724-2056 855-755-0566www.drawgallery.comMay-Dec: thurs-sat 12-5pm. A GalleryBeyond Walls representing WestcoastIsland Contemporary Canadian Art.Sep 12-Nov 23 “Parade Group Exhibit”features new works by local andgallery artists Paul Bishop, FrankBoas, Colleen Clancy, Nanci Cook,Cathy Corbett, Barbara Damer, PerryJohnston, Astrid Thimmel Johnston,Louise Lavallee, Amy Louise, DavydOram, John Stuart Pryce, PerrinSparks, Catherine Tableau, Cat Thomand Tamas Zalatnai.

Port Moody Arts Centre2425 St Johns St 604-931-2008 www.pomoarts.camon-thurs 10am-8pm fri-sat 10am-5pm sun 12-4pm closed holidays.Sep 12-Oct 13 MAIN GALLERY Suite ELife Drawing Group, “Then & Now:Portrait of a Community”, paintingsand drawings of Port Moody commu-nity members; 3D GALLERY PortMoody Arts Centre Open Clay Stu-dio, “That’s Not What I Put in theKiln”, photographs of finished works;PLUM GALLERY Clay For You PotteryGroup, “Korean Pottery: Shaping Tra-dition”, ceramic works by students ofmaster potter Clay (Jung Hong) Kim;Oct 17-Nov 7 PLUM GALLERY AND DIS-PLAY CASE Patti Munro: Within MyImagination, paintings and installa-tions explore narrative themesthrough mixed-media assemblages.

Two Rivers Gallery725 Civic Plaza 250-614-7800 www.tworiversgallery.camon-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pmsun 12-5pm. Sep 12-Oct 25MaureenFaulkner, “Cake: A Traveller’s Jour-ney”, series of drawings and water-colours produced between 1971 and2010 during Faulkner’s travels in

France, Mexico, Rajasthan and Cam-bodia, also a new series of drawingsand paintings based on cakes, adevice through which the artist repre-sents her world; Thru Sep 29 DavidAlexander, “The Shape of Place”,works from all phases of his careerdepict locales such as the CanadianArctic, Iceland, the Prairies and theRocky Mountains; Jane Isakson,“From the Outer Edges”, landscapepaintings inspired by visits to GwaiiHaanas in Haida Gwaii, Ivvavik inYukon, and Gros Morne in Newfound-land; Oct 11-Jan 5 Will Gill, “Blood-redlife”, the complexity of contempo-rary life is tempered with the often vis-ceral discomfort that reflects the dark-er side of humanity; Chosen: Worksfrom Two Rivers Gallery PermanentCollection, works voted on by thepeople of Prince George.

Museum of Northern BC100 First Ave W 250-624-3207 www.museumofnorthernbc.comSep: daily 9am-5pm, Oct: tues-sat9am-5pm. Admission: adults $6, stu-dents $2, children under 12 $1, chil-dren under 5 free, members free. SepEasel Weasels Artist Guild, “Portraitsof the North”, new artworks in a vari-ety of styles and media include oil,watercolour, acrylic, pastel and mixedmedia; Oct Celebrating Northern BCArtists: The Ridley Terminal Inc. ArtInitiative 2013, features regionalartists – benefits a number of charities

that will receive the artworks at theend of the exhibit; Ongoing Permanentexhibits of Northwest Coast history,art and culture in several galleries.

The Old School HouseArts Centre122 Fern Rd W 250-752-6133 www.theoldschoolhouse.orgmon-sat 10am-4:30pm. Sep 3-28TOSH Members’ Show, secondannual exhibition with focus on paint-ings, drawings and photographs; Sep30-Oct 26 Helen Webster and LisaDanesin (mother and daughter),abstract paintings; Leigh Buchanan,acrylic paintings; Richard Sand-strom, woodcrafts; Oct 28-Nov 19Lesley Gregory, Chris Kazeil andDiane McCarten, abstract paintings;Ravi Pal Sharma, portraits.

The Investors GroupRichmond Office #57100-5811 Cooney Rd604-270-7700 Ext. 249 phone for exhibition hours. Sep 12-Oct 17 Passing Through: Works byNicole Steinbrecher, acrylic andmixed media, sponsored by theInvestors Group.

Richmond Art Gallery7700 Minoru Gate 604-247-8300 www.richmondartgallery.orgmon-fri 10am-6pm thurs 10am-9pmsat & sun 10am-5pm. Sep 7-Oct 3Michelle Gay, Lee Henderson, DougJarvis, Steve Lyons and Peter Morin,“Fictive Realities”, using technologiessuch as interactive digital projection,artware (artist-made software), video-mediated sculptural installations, andold-fashioned storytelling, the exhibi-tion literally and figuratively projectsalternate visions of reality.

Rufus Lin Gallery ofJapanese Art415 S Tower, 5811 Cooney Rd604-303-6330 www.rufuslingallery.common-fri 10am-5pm, closed holidays.Admission free. Thru Sep 26 “Japan-ese Portraits 2013”, paintings fromthe gallery’s permanent collectionfeature the kimono, using both con-temporary and traditional media to

PORT ALBERNI

PORT MOODY

PRINCE GEORGE

PRINCE RUPERT

QUALICUM BEACH

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36 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

Skai Fowler, Embedded Rocks (2013),acrylic on canvas, Skaiart.com [Studio 13Fine Art, Vancouver, BC, Sept 27-Oct 3,www.studio13fineart.com]

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bring the pieces to life, featuringYuri, Maki Matsuzawa and others;Sep 2-Oct 28 Chigiri-e by Mie Mori2013, painting-like collages are cre-ated with washi (Japanese paper).

Salmon Arm Art Gallery70 Hudson Ave NE 250-832-1170 www.salmonarmartscentre.catues-sat 11am-4pm. Sep 7-28 Jere-my Shantz, “A Documentation of MyPrivate Suffering”, new paintings; Oct5-26 Essence of Being, drawings ofthe human face by 15 local artists.

Morley Myers Studio11-315 Upper Ganges Rd250-537-4898 www.morleymyersgallery.com11am-4pm or by appt. The studio is anopportunity to see where Myersexpands upon the language of theModernists and brings abstract humanform and experience into physical real-ity in a contemporary setting.

Peninsula Gallery100-2506 Beacon Ave250-655-1282 877-787-1896www.pengal.common-fri 9am-5:30pm sat 9am-5pm.Sep 7-14 Featuring Janice Robertson(acrylics), paintings of beaches, creeksand forest scenes and inspiration fromher home and garden; Carol Evans(watercolours), Douglas Fisher (wood);giclée prints by Robert Bateman andCarol Evans; Oct 28-Nov 8 27th Birth-day Show, annual exhibition of newworks by gallery artists include RobertBateman, Carol Evans, W. Allan Han-cock, Gail Johnson, Clement Kwan,Sheila Mather, Catherine Moffat,Michael O’Toole, Nancy O’Toole, RonParker and others; new sculptures byDon Bastian, Brent Cooke and JackKreutzer.

South Shore Gallery2046 Otter Point Rd 250-642-2058 www.sooke.org/southshoregallery

mon-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 1-Oct 15Paintings, sculpture, ceramics, jew-ellery and wearables; Oct 18-30Christopher Lucas, expressive andcolourful acrylic paintings.

Foyer Gallery at the SquamishPublic Library37907 2nd Ave 604-892-3110 604-815-3629www.squamish.bclibrary.ca/servicesprograms/foyer-gallerymon-thurs 12-8pm fri-sun 10am-4pm. Thru Sep 30 WALLS & CASESKylie O’Grady and Karen Yarem-kewich, “Wizard of Oz”, mixedmedia; Oct 1-Nov 4 WALLS WandaDoyle, “The Landscape Explored”,oil paintings; CASES Denise Hughes,“New Stories”, ceramic art.

Goldmoss Gallery2840 Lower Rd, Roberts Creek604-886-1968 www.goldmoss.comfri, sat & sun 3-7pm or by appt.

SALMON ARM

SALT SPRING ISLAND

SIDNEY

SOOKE

SQUAMISH

SUNSHINE COAST

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Opens Oct 18 “Un-tamed”, newworks in sculpture, painting andinstallation by Lee Roberts, JuanFernanadez, Caroline Weaver, JaySenetchko, Ben Tour, Tancré Ines,Donna Balma, Sally Michener, BonRoberts, Robert Barry Wainwright,Derek Hunter and Mira Hunter; Oct19-20 10am-6pm Sunshine CoastArt Crawl Exhibition, new works bygallery artists with sound and visualinstallations, music and food.

Landing Gallery Artists’ Co-op436 Marine Dr, Gibsons 604-886-0099 www.landinggallery.cadaily 10am-5pm. Sep 25-Nov 13Expressions in 3 Colours, eclecticselection of paintings, pottery, fibre,glass, jewellery, stone sculpture andbook binding, created by membersof this artists’ co-operative.

Sunshine Coast Arts Council,Doris Crowston Gallery5714 Medusa St, Sechelt604-885-5412 www.scartscouncil.comwed-sat 11am-4pm sun 1-4pm. ThruSep 8 Carte Blanche, juried exhibi-tion; Sep 11-Oct 6 “Through the Eyesof Gordon Adaskin”, paintings, sculp-

tures and prints from Adaskin’s stu-dio and private collection includeworks by Bruce Head, GordonSmith, Jack Harman, Flemming Jor-gensen, Don LiLeger, John Snow,Bill Koochin, Jean Clarke, GeorgeMihalcheon, Winston Leathers andWill Ogilvie; Oct 9-Nov 3Nena Braa-then, Janice McFegan and RussTkachuk, “Printers by the Sea”, etch-ings, woodcuts, linocuts and mono-prints with themes ranging from rec-ognizable elements to vivid abstractimagery of pure and wild speculation.

Arnold MikelsonMind & Matter Art Gallery13743 16th Ave 604-536-6460 www.mindandmatterart.comdaily 12-6pm. Sep Betty Hurd,acrylic; Elmer Gunderson, wood andstone carvings; Robert Gonzales,woodturning; Jack Olive, pottery;Anees Peterman, acrylic; PaulineDutkowski, Mary Mikelson andIlona Fekete, “Outside the Box Fab-ric Extravaganza”; Oct Arnold Mikel-son, wood sculpture; Gunilla Lind-gren, watercolour; Anita Lindblom,mixed media; Christopher F. Potter,watercolour; Sheila Symington,mixed media; Kevin Healy, stonesculptures; Val Eibner, fused glass;Darrel Hancock, pottery and JulieBourne, raku.

Kwantlen Art Gallery & ArbutusGallery at Coast Capital SavingsKwantlen Polytechnic UniversityD126-12666 72nd AveCloverdale Campus: 5500 180th St604-599-2219 www.kwantlen.ca/fine-artsCheck the website for hours. SURREYCAMPUS: KWANTLEN ART GALLERY ANDARBUTUS GALLERY Sep 3-16 BrucePollock, “Indigo”, paintings anddrawings.

� Surrey Art Gallery13750 88th Ave (at King George Blvd)604-501-5566 www.surrey.ca/artgalleryThru Sep 21: mon 9am-5pm tues-thurs 9am-9pm fri 9am-5pm sat10am-5pm (closed sun & holidays),From Sep 22: tues-thurs 9am-9pm fri9am-5pm sat 10am-5pm sun 12-5pm(closed mon & holidays). Sep 21-Dec15 Sarindar Dhaliwal, “Narrativesfrom the Beyond”, histories andmemories of India, Britain and Canadacollide in compelling works of pho-tography, textile art and sculpture;Sylvia Grace Borda and JeremyHerndl, “Figuring Ground”, rapidlyshifting south-of-the-Fraser land-scapes are captured in Borda’s stereo-scopic video experiments of farm-land, and Herndl’s vivid paintings ofNorth Surrey’s built environment;Thru Nov 24Surrey ArtsWest Society,“Art Beat”, recent works; Thru Dec 8Nancy Paterson, “Stock MarketSkirt”, one of the first telerobotic

SURREY

38 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

Catherine Nelson, Danube Dusk (2012),archival pigment print [Jennifer KostuikGallery, Vancouver BC, Oct 17-Nov 15]

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sculptures totally interfaced with theInternet; SURREY URBAN SCREEN (on theexterior of Chuck Bailey RecreationCentre 13458-107A Ave, surreyurbanscreen.ca) Sep 6-15 JosephinBöttger, “Trapez”, video footage ofconstruction work, blended with timelapses and drawn elements, distortstime and reality; Sep 21-Jan 6 SylviaGrace Borda, “Aerial Fields”, newsite-specific work captures aerialvideo documentation of agriculturalareas south of the Fraser River.

Tsawwassen LonghouseGallery1710-56th St 604-943-3313 www.southdeltaartistsguild.comthurs-sun 11am-4pm. Thru Sep 15Private Members Show; Sep 16-29Private Members Show; Sep 30-Oct13 Private Members Show, visit thewebsite for details; Oct 17-Nov 17South Delta Artists Guild and DeltaPhoto Club, “Interpretation & Collab-orations”, paintings and photo-graphs – members paint their inter-pretations of the photographs.

221A100-221 E Georgia St 604-568-0812 http://221a.catues-fri 10am-5pm sat 12-5pm. Sep14-Oct 19 Jamie Hilder and BradyCranfield, “Due to Injuries”.

Access Gallery222 E Georgia St 604-689-2907 www.accessgallery.catues-sat 12-5pm. Visit the websitefor exhibition information.

Art Beatus (Vancouver)Consultancy Ltd.108-808 Nelson St 604-688-2633 www.artbeatus.common-fri 10am-6pm. Thru Oct 18Yuichi Takasaka, “Fires In the North”,ethereal photographs of the AuroraBorealis capture the sublime beauty ofthe mysterious visitors of the North.

The Art Emporium2928 Granville St 604-738-3510 www.theartemporium.caby appt only tues-sat 10am-6pm.Exceptional inventory of paintings by

major Canadian, American and Frenchmasters of the 20th C., featuring EmilyCarr and all members of the Group ofSeven and several of their contempo-raries, C. Krieghoff, David Milne,J.W. Morrice, Tom Thomson; paint-ings by Karel Appel, A. Calder, E.Cortez, Montague Dawson, Jean andRaoul Dufy, A. Hambourg, J. Hervé,Picasso, Utrillo, A. Volti, AndrewWyeth, and Canadians Max Bates,Donald Flather, H.G. Glyde, E.J.Hughes, F. Lansdowne, John Little,Henri Masson, Rudolph Messner,Hugh Monahan, Riopelle, GoodridgeRoberts, Jack Shadbolt and AndrewWong.

Art Works Gallery225 Smithe St 604-688-3301 www.artworksbc.common-fri 9am-6pm sat 10am-6pm sun12-5pm. Thru Sep 26 “Flower Power”,artworks feature the seductive powerof flowers with Margaret Devenyi,Carole Arnston, Ken West, WayneLeidenfrost, Steve Fortier, ToddClark, Loretta Shumate Banderas,Natasha Barnes, Maria Eva, EllenGunn, Allen Hayes, Jelen, Kelemen,Martin Quen, Starlie Sokol-Hohne,

TSAWWASSEN

VANCOUVER

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 39

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40 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

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Spare, Surret, Scott, Trey, Lun Tse,Van Beckum, Helen Zarin and ZeldaMinkist.

Arts Off Main216 E 28th Ave 604-876-2785 www.artsoffmain.cawed-sun 11:30am-5:30pm. An artist-run gallery with work exclusively byBC artists offering original and afford-able paintings, prints, sculpture, pho-tographs, jewellery and pottery. Workby new artists Kathryn Ragan, Jen-nifer Mitton, paintings, and LindaRead, jewellery. Feature Septemberartist Camille Sleeman, landscapes.

Artspeak233 Carrall St 604-688-0051 www.artspeak.catues-sat 12-5pm. Sep 14-Oct 26 Abi-gail DeVille, new site-specific instal-lation comprising materials scav-enged from the streets of Vancouver,

particularly in the gallery’s neigh-bourhood of Gastown in the Down-town Eastside.

ArtStarts Gallery808 Richards St 604-336-0626 Ext. 105www.artstarts.com/gallerytues-fri 10am-5pm sat 10am-4pm.Sep 28-Mar 2014 Sound Play!,kindergarten to grade 12 studentsexperimented with music, acoustics,composition and sound-making tocreate installations and artworks incollaboration with professional artistsand educators; also showcasingsongwriting by students andBoris Sichon’s collection of musicalinstruments from around the world.

Audain Gallery149 W Hastings St, SFU Woodward’s778-782-9102 www.audaingallery.catues-sat 12-6pm. Thru Sep 21 Disori-entations/Illuminations: MFA Gradu-

ating Exhibition, new projects show-case new works in various disciplines,including painting, sculpture, video,dance, installation, sound, and sociallyengaged practices, shown in twoparts. Thru Sep 7 “Disorientations”,works by Calla Churchward, GabrielSaloman, Daisy Thompson and AlizeZorlutuna, investigate embodied rela-tionships with institutions, hierar-chies and systems, be they religious,academic or normative; Sep 12-21“Illuminations”, works by HamidrezaJadid, Sydney Koke and CharleneVickers emphasize the potential forpersonal, social and political mean-ings to become embedded in andrevealed through material practices;Oct 3-Dec 14 Hito Steyerl: Adorno’sGrey (2012), installation features asingle channel video set at the Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt, whereTheodor W. Adorno taught, two con-servators scrape the classroom walls,

42 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

www.trenchgallery.com

David Marshall (1928-2006)TRENCH CONTEMPORARY ART, VANCOUVER BC – Sep 19-Oct 26, 2013 Vancouver artist David Mar-shall was a prolific sculptor who worked in the Modernist tradition of the internationally celebratedsculptor Henry Moore. Marshall created numerous monolithic stone sculptures in an abstract styleand monumental abstracted heads. Hiswork was known to only a limitednumber of collectors in Vancouveruntil, in 2012, VanDusen BotanicalGarden installed three epic Carraramarble sculptures created by Marshallbetween 1999 and 2003.

Like Henry Moore, Marshall wasinfluenced by non-Western art forms,particularly primitivism. He was born inVancouver and studied art at theOntario College of Art from 1947 to1949. In the early 1950s, Marshall con-tinued his studies at the University ofBritish Columbia. In 1952, after movingto London, he met Moore.

Marshall shared Moore’s love ofcarving and treatment of the sculpturalprocess as one of “taking away” fromforms rather than building them up by modelling. However, Marshall’s sculptures are less psycholog-ical and anthropomorphic than Moore’s, and based to a greater degree on geometric primitives. Hecontinued to work in stone, bronze, wood and plaster in a typically Modernist style until his death in2006. He has left an impressive wealth of outstanding examples.

Trench Contemporary Art now represents David Marshall’s estate and is showing most of thepieces to the public for the first time. The exhibition includes a selection of photos taken by Jeff Wallof Marshall’s East Vancouver studio, where Marshall produced the majority of his work. Mia Johnson

David Marshall, Small Texada Carving (Head) (1998), black Texada limestone[Trench Contemporary Art, Vancouver BC, Sep 19-Oct 26]

Page 43: GUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMS - Preview Art Magazine

looking for the layer of grey thatAdorno had painted in order to pro-mote concentration.

Bau-Xi Gallery3045 Granville St 604-733-7011 www.bau-xi.common-sat 10am-5:30pm sun 11am-5:30pm. Sep 13-26 Bobbie Burgers,“Alchemy”, luscious bouquets,blown-up botanicals and pastorallandscapes focus on sumptuouscolour and wild movement; Oct 3-17MAIN GALLERY David Alexander, “Evi-dence in Place”, signature land-scapes and abstracted water reflec-tions; UPPER GALLERY Virginia Mak,“Of One’s Own”, photography –pushing beyond traditional limits;Oct 19-30MAIN GALLERY Bratsa Boni-facho, “Testament Papers”, new can-vases with verbal messages com-ment on philosophy, art, politics andsex, are heavily textured and withdeep layers of vivid colour; UPPERGALLERY Heidi Leverty, “DroppedThreads”, the artist examines thereality of what happens to usedclothes when they are dropped intobags, shutes and boxes around townto be magically revived and repur-posed for those in need; MEZZANINEAlistair Bell (1913-1997), selectedworks in celebration of the artist’s100th year.

Beaty Biodiversity MuseumUniversity of British Columbia2212 Main Mall 604-827-4955 www.beatymuseum.ubc.camon-sun 10am-5pm. Sep 27-Jan 5Kevin Carpenter, Erick James andPatrick Keeling, “Invisible Portraits:Revealing the Secret World ofMicrobes” features high-tech imagesof microbial life refashioned as metalsculpture, wood carvings and large-scale portraiture.

Bill Reid Galleryof Northwest Art639 Hornby St 604-682-3455 www.billreidgallery.cawed-sun 11am-5pm. Admission(+GST): adults $10, seniors/students$7, youth/child 5-17 $5, kids 4 andunder free, family (2 adults + 2 chil-dren) $25. Group rates and guidedtours available when booked inadvance. Showcasing the permanentcollection of Bill Reid and changingexhibitions of contemporary North-west Coast art. Thru Sep 15 Paint:

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 43

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6th AVE

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7th AVE

8th AVE

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S O U T H G R A N V I L L E G A L L E R Y A S S O C I AT I O N

WWW.SGGA.CA

GALLERY ROW1 UNO LANGMANN 604.736.8825 langmann.com

2 KIMOTO GALLERY 604.428.0903 kimotogallery.com

3 DOUGLAS UDELL 604.736.8900 douglasudellgallery.com

4 PETLEY JONES 604.732.5353 petleyjones.com

5 IAN TAN 604.738.1077 iantangallery.com

6 ELISSA CRISTALL 604.730.9611 cristallgallery.com

7 MASTERS GALLERY 604.558.4244 vancouver-mastersgalleryltd.com

8 HEFFEL 604.732.6505 heffel.com

9 DOUGLAS REYNOLDS 604.731.9292 douglasreynoldsgallery.com

10 MARION SCOTT 604.685.1934 marionscottgallery.com

11 KURBATOFF 604.736.5444 kurbatoffgallery.com

12 GRANVILLE FINE ART 604.266.6010 granvillefineart.com

13 ART EMPORIUM 604.738.3510 theartemporium.ca

14 BAU-XI GALLERY 604.733.7011 bau-xi.com

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The Painted Works of Lyle Wilson,major exhibition of paintings by Van-couver-based Haisla artist reveals hisevolving artistic vision and celebrateshis accomplishments as a painter;Opens Sep 25 RezErect: Native Erot-ica, works by 30 mid-career to mas-ter artists from the Northwest Coast,the exhibition presents a fresh, play-ful, provocative insight into FirstNations sensuality and sexuality.

Britannia Art Gallery1661 Napier St, Britannia Library604-718-5800 604 874-5916www.britanniacentre.orgmon, thurs, fri 8:30am-5pm tues, wed8:30am-9pm sat 9:30am-5pm sun 1-5pm. Sep 4-11 Then and Now – Bri-tannia Art Gallery’s 20th Anniver-sary, works by artists from the LowerMainland, Gulf Islands, Nelson, Pen-ticton and Courtenay; Sep 16-27 InDa Picture: Enhancing the Voice ofYouth, photo-based works by Britan-

nia Youth Arts Teens; Oct 2-Nov 2RonHilliard, “Balance of Nature”, paint-ings and drawings; Tony Yin Tak Chu,“Commercial Drive”, drawings ontranslucent materials.

Catriona Jeffries Gallery274 E 1st Ave 604-736-1554 www.catrionajeffries.comtues-sat 11am-5pm. Sep 20-Nov 2Damian Moppett, “Salute”.

Centre A, VancouverInternational Centre forContemporary Asian Art229 E Georgia St 604-683-8326 www.centrea.orgtues-sat 11am-6pm. New LocationSep 13-Nov 2 Hajra Waheed, “Min-utes from a Second Story”; Waheedreflects on the mood and experiencesof the everyday in a comprehensivebody of work that includes video andmixed-media works on paper; theCalgary-born, Montreal-based artist

draws on experiences of growing upin Saudi Arabia within the gated head-quarters of Saudi ARAMCO.

� Chali-Rosso Art Gallery2250 Granville St 604-733-3594 877-325-1669www.chalirosso.comtues-sun 11am-6pm or by appt.Masters Collection of Rembrandtvan Rijn, Pierre-Auguste Renoir,Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso,Marc Chagall, Joan Miró, SalvadorDali, Robert Motherwell and Wass-ily Kandinsky.

Charles H. Scott GalleryEmily Carr University of Art + Design1399 Johnston St, Granville Island604-844-3809 www.chscott.ecuad.cadaily 12-5pm. Sep 25-Nov 24 Mar-cus Coates, Beau Dick, Angus Fer-guson, Glenn Kaino, Sean Lynchand Duke Riley, “The Voyage, orThree Years at Sea, Part VI”, sea lore

46 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

www.aggv.ca/�

Urban Thunderbirds/Ravens in a Material WorldlessLIE, Dylan Thomas/Rande Cook, Francis DickART GALLERY OF GREATER VICTORIA, VICTORIA BC – Sep 20, 2013-Jan 12, 2014 Four First

Nations artists, all native to Vancouver Island, bringtheir considerable talents together in this intriguingtwo-part installation of paintings, prints, photographyand mixed media. Included are lessLIE, a Coast Salishartist originally from Duncan; Dylan Thomas, alsoCoast Salish, from Victoria; and Rande Cook andFrancis Dick, both members of the Kwakwaka'wakwNation and both born in Alert Bay.

Ranging in impact from the subtle to the blatant,this collection of work is visually appealing and con-ceptually dynamic. lessLIE pairs his bold printmakingwith provocative wordplay. Dylan Thomas’s graphicprints surprise with stylized images of non-traditionalsubject matter. Francis Dick presents inspiring imagesof First Nations women in poses usually reserved forcultural heroes, while Rande Cook’s compelling(almost shocking) photography series features theartist posing in the streets of New York City wearing avery sombre wooden mask.

Using traditional skills and imagery with conceptsand practices common in the broader contemporaryart culture, these artists explore, challenge and redefinestandard expectations surrounding First Nations art

practice. These works are politically powerful, bringing to mind important questions about the shiftingrole of traditional assumptions and values in our modern world. Christine Clark

Francis Dick, Witness (2011), acrylic on canvas [Art Galleryof Greater Victoria, Victoria BC, Sep 20-Jan 12]

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MADRONA GALLERYLuke Ramsey - Off Lines

Sept. 12-26Corrinne Wolcoski - Solo Exhibition

Oct. 19-Nov. 2

606 VIEW STREET250-380-4660

TUES-SAT 10AM-5:30PM | SUN-MON 11AM-5PM

www.madronagallery.com

WINCHESTER GALLERIESTONY URQUHART: RETROSPECTIVE

September 10 - 28, 2013OPENING RECEPTION: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1 - 5PM

Also showing: Joseph Plaskett at 95 Years: A Celebration!

2260 OAK BAY AVE250-595-2777

TUES-SAT 10AM-5:30PM

www.winchestergalleriesltd.com

VICTORIA GALLERIESC

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OPEN SPACE TANYA DOODY

Exhibition: September 13 to 28, 2013Opening: September 13, at 7:00 pm

SANDRA MEIGSExhibition: November 1 to December 4, 2013

Opening: November 1, at 7:30 pm

510 FORT STREET250-383-8833

www.openspace.ca

POLYCHROME FINE ARTLance Austin Olsen

Solo Exhibition – Blood and MemoryBook Launch: Images From Sound

Opening & book launch October 3, 7-9pmClosing October 17

977-A FORT STREET250-382-2787

TUES-SAT 10AM-5PM

www.polychromefinearts.com

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is explored by bringing together thework of local and international con-temporary artists with archival mate-rials; this is the final chapter in anexhibition series that explores ourrelationship to the sea.

Chinese Cultural CentreMuseum and Archives555 Columbia St604-658-8880 604-658-8883www.cccvan.comtue-sun 11am-5pm. Sep 14-Oct 6West Meets East: The PataphysicalPaintings of James K-M and SynnKune Loh, mixed media; Oct 12 Dis-play of Chinese Shadow TheatrePuppets; Permanent exhibition Gen-eration to Generation – History ofChinese Immigrants in BritishColumbia.

Choboter Fine Art23 Alexander St604-688-0145 604-779-7050www.choboter.common-sat 12-6pm. Ongoing presenta-tion of recent and older figurativeabstract paintings by local artist DonChoboter.

Circle Craft Gallery1-1666 Johnston St, Granville Island604-669-8021 www.circlecraft.netdaily 10am-7pm. Thru Oct 1 BrianHoyano and Roberto Fioravanti,“New Work”, metal exhibition in cel-ebration of Circle Craft’s 40thanniversary; Oct 5-31 Circle CraftChristmas Market Preview Show,advance peek at works by artists whowill be exhibiting at the annual CircleCraft Christmas Market in the west

building of the new Vancouver Con-vention Centre Nov 7-11.

Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery1024 Mainland St, Yaletown2nd location: 312 Water St, Gastown604-684-9222 604-685-9298www.coastalpeoples.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 11am-6pm.GASTOWN AND YALETOWN GALLERIESOngoing “Arctic Wind IV: an expres-sion of freedom”, the Inuit feel mostfree on their own land; a diverse col-lection of works in serpentine stone,marble and original drawings featureartists from the Canadian Arctic,Tim Pitseolak, Kavavaow Man-nomee, Ningeokuluk Teevee, Kanang-inak Pootoogook, Oqutaq Mikkigakand more.

48 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

kelownaartgallery.com�

Keith Langergraber: Theatre of the Exploding SunKELOWNA ART GALLERY, KELOWNA BC – Oct 5-Dec 22, 2013

Keith Langergraber’s 2013 exhibition, Theatre of the Exploding Sun, is a collaboration between theKelowna Art Gallery and the Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge. It features a three-part filmentitled Time Traveller Trilogy, together with drawings and several large sculptures.

For Rattlesnake Island, his 2010 exhibit at the Kelowna Art Gallery, Langergraber filmed him-self as a young man on a quest to sight the legendary Ogopogo of Lake Okanagan. Time TravellerTrilogy similarly employs an alter-ego as the protagonist. Various scenes depict the CaymanIslands, Lake Okanagan, California and Pavilion Lake, BC. The first film centres on the protag-

onist making a fan film atBritannia Beach, BC. Hethen travels to a site in thedesert-like landscape nearKamloops, BC. The secondfilm employs multi-mediaand animation in a secondstory of a man shooting afan film. The third film,The Glass Island, exploresthe "fan-dom" surroundingDoctor Who. All three filmsare spoofs of science fictionfan films.

Langergraber earned aBFA from the University ofVictoria and an MFA fromthe University of British

Columbia. He has exhibited extensively in solo and group shows in Canada, the United States andAsia since 1995. He has received many grants and awards for his work, and was nominated for theSobey Award in 2009. He has taught at UBC, Emily Carr University and North Island College.

The exhibition catalogue for Theatre of the Exploding Sun includes texts by Liz Wylie, RyanDoherty (SAAG curator) and Charlotte Townsend-Gault. Mia Johnson

Keith Langergraber (2012), production still from a film sequence in The Glass Island [Kelowna ArtGallery, Kelowna BC, Oct 5-Dec 22]

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Contemporary Art Gallery555 Nelson St 604-681-2700 www.contemporaryartgallery.catues-sun 12-6pm. Sep 14-Nov 3 B.C.BINNING AND ALVIN BALKIND GALLERIESMike Nelson, two new commissionsinclude a series of sculptures pro-duced in partnership with The PowerPlant, and new photographic work thatdraws inspiration from family photo-graphs taken between 1957 and 1972by the Canadian anthropologist Wil-son Duff; Thru Nov 3 WINDOW SPACESKay Rosen, two large-scale new com-missions across the front of the build-ing and in the Richards St window,“Cutout” and “Duck in the Muck” (aka“Exxon Axxident”); Offsite YALETOWN-ROUNDHOUSE STATION, CANADA LINE ThruSep 22 Itee Pootoogook, “Sky atNight”, large-scale printed version of adrawing of a landscape that alters aslight changes throughout the day; Oct1-Jan 12 Mungo Thomson, “NegativeSpace”, installation – ongoing seriesof photographic murals of invertedastronomical imagery sourced fromthe Hubble space telescope generat-ing a negative image every time theHubble generates a positive one, theproject also includes an artist book, anoriginal font and a screensaver; part ofCapture, Vancouver’s first annual city-wide photography festival; BURRARDMARINA FIELD HOUSE STUDIO 1655 WHYTEAVE Thru Sep 29 Raymond Boisjoly,artist in residence, the space is usedas a studio and a place for communityengagement.

Craft Council of BC Gallery1386 Cartwright St, Granville Island604-687-7270 888-687-6511www.craftcouncilbc.cadaily 10:30am-5.30pm. Thru Oct 15Deborah Dumka, “Restorative Nich-es”, fibre; Oct 10-Nov 25 Sabina Hill,Jeff Trigg, Meredith Nicole, MeaganSchafer and Brent Comber, “Roots”,wood furniture, presented by OdenGallery; Oct 18-Nov 9 invested/40,celebrates the work of artists whohave dedicated their lives to the cre-ation of outstanding art objects whileexperiencing the joy of fully investingoneself in this demanding field.

The Cultch Gallery1895 Venables St 604-251-1766 www.thecultch.common-fri 12-6pm sat 12-4pm andbefore evening performances. ThruSep 28 Jon Shaw, “Streets, Signs and

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 49

DESERT EAGLE FINE ART

Featuring Trail of the Painted Ponies Signature Artist Wendy Wells-Bailey

Desert Eagle Fine Art Celebrating 25 years showing contemporary fine artwww.deserteaglefineart.com • [email protected]

604 308-3995

“Free Sp

irit” R

esin cast sculpture 16 X 6 X 13

H

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Alleyways”, a grungy yet vibrant andcolourful, unique vision of Vancouver;Dante J. Comoglio, “Yes-No andHorizons”, interactive 2-D sculptureand photo-manipulated images ofhorizons; Oct 1-Nov 2 Lisa Maclean,“Urban Pastoral”, photo-manipulatedexperiment focused on technology,nature and the visible spectrum;Wendy D, “Scream”, an emotionalphoto set of subjects before and aftera good scream; Tehya MacKenzie,“Apoidea”, symmetrical photo col-lages that examine bees in their man-made habitats.

David Tycho Fine Art430-1000 Parker St 604-733-6945www.tychoart.comby appt only. A variety of abstractand expressionist paintings, col-lages and mixed-media works byVancouver artist David Tycho, now

showing the recent Urban Rhythmspaintings, as well as works from theJapan, Vital Gesture, River andBlack Tusk series.

Doctor Vigari Gallery1816 Commercial Dr 604-255-9513 www.doctorvigarigallery.common-sat 11am-6pm sun 12am-5pm.More artists are going back to rootsof signature designer furniture, homeaccessories, jewellery, glass, potteryand fine art.

Douglas Reynolds Gallery2335 Granville St 604-731-9292 www.douglasreynoldsgallery.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 12-5pm.Specializing in contemporary andhistoric Northwest Coast Native artand offering a wide selection ofworks by leading First Nationsartists, including Bill Reid, Robert

Davidson, Don Yeomans and BeauDick, artwork includes carved woodmasks, carved cedar bentwood box-es, totem poles, bronze and glasseditions, baskets, prints, and hand-crafted gold and silver jewellery.

Douglas Udell Gallery1566 W 6th Ave, 2nd Flr 604-736-8900 www.douglasudellgallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm. Sep 7-21 Rotat-ing exhibition by gallery artists includ-ing Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas,Mara Korkola, Natalka Husar andmore; Oct 5-Nov 2 Adam Fuss, NewYork-based photographer, producesphotomechanical rendering of pho-tograms created by placing objects onlarge sheets of Cibachrome paper thatare briefly exposed to light, resultingin colourful abstractions, elusive sil-houettes of floating babies, and hyp-notic rays of vibrating hues.

50 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

www.davidsongalleries.com

Etsuko Ichikawa: Echo at SatsopDAVIDSON GALLERIES, SEATTLE WA – SEP 6-28, 2013Reflecting on the recent tsunami and nucleartragedies in her native Japan, Etsuko Ichikawarecently gained access to the defunct Satsop nuclearpower plant in Elma, Washington. Her experiencesat the site serve as the basis for this new exhibition,which includes a short film and a sculptural soundinstallation drawn from her time there, as well asworks on paper created from her unique aquagraphand pyrograph techniques.

Ichikawa’s short film Echo at Satsop, which shedirected and produced, speaks of solitude, loss anddecay through the lens of quiet spirituality.

While at Satsop, Ichikawa collected many soundsamples created from echoes in the vast, hauntingchambers at the facility. Her aquagraphs considerthese evocative moments through subtle imageryproduced from the combination of water dropletsand soot deposited on embossed paper. Continuallyinterested in this space between the ephemeral andthe eternal, Ichikawa has also developed a signatureglass pyrograph technique. Using molten glass to“draw” on paper, she is able to imprint traces of heractions and the process onto the paper.

Ichikawa was born in Tokyo, Japan, and studied painting at Tokyo Zokei University. Shemoved to Seattle in 1993, where she worked with Dale Chihuly as a studio assistant. Her ownexperimental glass work, as well as in-depth study in spirituality, led to the unique artisticapproach that she uses in her work. Allyn Cantor

Etsuko Ichikawa, Echo at Satsop (2013), still from film[Davidson Galleries, Seattle WA, Sep 6-28]

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Dundarave Print Workshop and Gallery1640 Johnston St, Granville Island604-689-1650 www.dundaraveprintworkshop.comSep: daily 11am-5pm, Oct: wed-sun11am-5pm. Sep 4-23 Celia Pickles,“Landscapes”, new original prints;Sep 24-Oct 20 Wendy MorosoffSmith and Hannamari Jalovaara,“The Space Between”, unique collab-orative project explores the intangi-ble through collagraph plates printedin layers on emerging images.

Eagle Spirit Gallery1803 Maritime Mews, Granville Island604-801-5205 www.eaglespiritgallery.comdaily 11am-5pm or by appt.Specializing in Northwest Coast andInuit First Nations art and featuringmuseum quality hand-carved masks,panels, bentwood boxes, totempoles, argillite, button blankets, glasssculpture and Inuit stone works.

Elissa Cristall Gallery2239 Granville St 604-730-9611 www.cristallgallery.comtues-sat 11am-6pm. Sep 7-28 GavinLynch, “Old Magic”; Oct 5-Nov 2Grace Gordon-Collins, Eric Deis,Russ and Wendy Kwan, “Capture

Photo Festival”, Eric Deis presents aspecial project that questions the val-ue of photography in a world of on-demand digital culture.

Emily Carr Alumni Gallery,Queen Elizabeth Theatre630 Hamilton St604-630-4562 www.ecuaa.caOpen during theatre performances orby appt. Thru Sep 23 Carlyn Yandle,“Unlaced”, new work – handmadedoilies reimagined as sculptural worksand paintings that question theboundaries of art and craft, domesticarts and high art; Sep 23-Nov 18“Intuitive Inquiry”, Robin Ripley,mixed-media works of fragility andmodesty, suggesting that transforma-tion is possible through small ges-tures; Rosemary Burden, worksinformed by biology and particlephysics examine the parallels betweenthe binary language of computers andthe growth cycles found in our naturalworld.

English Bay Gallery107-1551 Johnston St, GranvilleIsland 604-688-3006 www.EnglishBayGallery.comdaily 10am-6pm. Ongoing YoshiYamamoto, photography; Bill Framp-ton, painting and photo collage.

Equinox Gallery525 Great Northern Way604-736-2405 www.equinoxgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 21-Oct 26Gordon Smith: New Works.

The Fazakas Gallery145 W 6th Ave 604-876-2729 www.fazakasgallery.comNEW tues-sat 10am-6pm. Sep 28-Nov 1 Beau Dick, Corey Bulpitt,Phil Gray, Carlos Colin, HalSchwarze and Carole Landau,“Story”, a group exhibition.

Federation Gallery1241 Cartwright St, Granville Island604-681-8534 www.artists.catues-sun 10am-4pm. Sep 3-15Autumn Salon, sale of works by Fed-eration of Canadian Artists members;Sep 17-Oct 6 Stafford Plant Collec-tion, works by the late Stafford Don-ald Plant, painter, instructor andgraphic designer; Oct 8-27 AIRS –Annual International Representa-tional Show, open internationaljuried exhibition of representationaland semi-representational originalpaintings, prints and drawings in allmedia and subject matter includingportraits, figures, still lifes, flo-rals, landscapes, interiors and wildlife.

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 51

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Firehall Arts Centre Gallery280 E Cordova St 604-689-0691 www.firehallartscentre.cawed-sat 1-5pm and before eveningperformances. Sep 4-Oct 6 ToniLatour, “The Femme Project”, pho-tographs document Vancouver’sself-identified queer femme commu-nity, focusing specifically on femmeidentity, representation and politics;Oct 9-27 Bruce Horak, “The Way ISee It”, paintings – a series of por-traits derived from halos legallyblind artist Horak can perceivearound his subjects.

Framagraphic Framing Gallery1116 W Broadway 604-738-0017 www.framagraphic.common-fri 9:30am-6pm sat 10am-5pm.Showing regular exhibitions ofrecent work from local and emergingPlace des Arts artists, an interna-tional print collection and Canadianpaintings, featuring works by

Kwakwaka’wakw artist Andy Ever-son, Quebec artist Marie-ClaudeBoucher and Ontario artists MarkBerens and Bob Arrigo.

Gallery Gachet88 E Cordova St 604-687-2468 www.gachet.orgwed-sun 12-6pm. Sep 13-Oct 13 LeefEvans, “One Hundred Self-Portraits inOne Hundred Days”, exhibitionexplores the kaleidoscope of the mun-dane – the colour and composition ofa body daily inhabited, but rarelyobserved; Ariel Kirk-Gushowaty andLisa Walker, “Spanning Time: Coin-ciding Self-Portraits”, exhibitionexplores the overall effects of long-term self-portraiture, including pointswhere their work has coincidentallycome together or intentionally over-lapped; also features a participatorypop-up photo studio where audiencemembers can create their own self-portraits.

Gallery Jones1725 W 3rd Ave 604-714-2216 www.galleryjones.comtues-fri 11am-6pm sat 12-5pm andby appt. Sep 4-28 Kevin Tolman,colour-field abstract paintings drawnfrom nature by New Mexico artist;Hans Schule, sculptures by Germanartist; Oct 3-31 Danny Singer, photo-graphs of the endless string of smalltowns whose life expectancy is now inquestion, from 12 years travelling theback roads of the Canadian Prairies;also available is Singer’s book MainStreet: Towns, Villages, and Hamletsof the Great Plains, a view of the heartand soul of the North American GreatPlains at the turn of the 21st C.

Gallery of BC Ceramics1359 Cartwright St, Granville Island604-669-3606 www.bcpotters.comdaily 10:30am-5:30pm. Sep 5-30Sally Michener: Back to the Future,sculptural and functional pieces that

52 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

www.reed.edu/gallery

Jamie Isenstein: Will ReturnDOUGLAS F. COOLEY MEMORIAL ART GALLERY, REED COLLEGE, PORTLAND OR – Aug 27-Oct 20

Jamie Isenstein is known for her theatrical works that existsomewhere between sculpture and performance. Theartist has created objects, drawings and mixed-mediainstallations over the last 15 years that employ a healthydose of wit and humour. The Portland native attend-ed Reed College before moving to New York, where shenow lives and practises her art.

Isenstein literally resides in many of her pieces, creat-ing a surreal circumstance and questionable narrative thatis often amusing. Her aesthetic is one of playful intellect.Sculptures and installations reference things like Vaude-ville entertainment, while others satirically poke fun at theestablished paradigm inherent in the art-artist-galleryexperience by skewing reality into absurd situations withsubtle physical illusions.

Segments of her own body are incorporated intomany works, acting similarly to the ready-made objectsthat are also part of her visual vocabulary. The clever Isen-stein uses a signature “Will Return” sign – the kind youwould find on the front door of a mom-and-pop shop –when she is not occupying her pieces. The significance ofthis “place-saver” questions the role of the artist in the lifeof the art. Isenstein will inhabit her work for this exhibi-tion during the September 19th reception and sporadical-ly throughout the exhibit. Seeing fragments of human

limbs is a little jarring, but the context Isenstein creates makes one want to smile. This strange juxta-position of feelings seems central to her art. Allyn Cantor

Jamie Isenstein, Arm Chair (2006), wood, metal, nylon,raw cotton, linen, jeans, shoes, hardware, human arms,human legs, or “Will Return” sign [Douglas F. CooleyMemorial Art Gallery, Reed College, Portland OR, Aug 27-Oct 20]

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span over 40 years; Oct 2-Nov 4Vancouver Collects: Exposed! vin-tage BC ceramics by artists whoshould be more widely celebrated,according to the collector; from theDavid R. Carlin Collection.

Granville Fine Art2447 Granville St 604-266-6010 www.granvillefineart.comtues-fri 10am-6pm sat 10am-5pm.“Contemporary Canadian Art”, nowrepresenting Ira Hoffecker, PeterMcConville, Tinyan Chan, DavidAntonides and Robert Genn; OngoingAlso showing museum quality paint-ings by historical Canadian artists andgroups (Group of Seven, Painters 11,Automatistes, etc), original works byPicasso, Renoir, Monet, Modiglianiand more.

grunt galleryUnit 116-350 E 2nd Ave604-875-9516 www.grunt.caCsetkwe Fortier, “Don’t Go Hungry”,multi-media installation that looks atstcuwin (salmon) as a traditional foodsource via process and connection;Sep 12-15 Josephin Böttger andSergej Tolksdorf, “Dynamo Lines”,multi-media project, part of NewForms Festival; Oct 25-Nov 30 JayceSalloum, “location/dis-location(s):contingent promises”, a series of pho-tographs that elaborate on the artist’spractice of nature versus constructedenvironments; Offsite at various loca-tions Thru Oct Desiree Palmen,“Mamook Ipsoot”, project with sevenAboriginal youths, each one to exploretheir connection to Vancouver’s urbanenvironment; visit the website.

Havana Gallery1212 Commercial Dr 604-253-9119 www.havanarestaurant.camon-thurs 11am-11pm fri 11am-midnight sat 10am-midnight sun10am-11pm. Thru Sep 11 RebekaSwayne; Sep 12-25 Nasser Ghaderi;Sep 26-Oct 9 Famous Empty Sky;Oct 10-23 Timothy Clayton; Oct 24-Nov 6 Charlie Gonzalez.

Heffel Fine Art Auction House2247 Granville St 604-732-6505800-528-9608 www.heffel.common-sat 9am-5pm. Online Auction.Sep 5-26 Canadian Post-War andContemporary Art; Oct 3-31 FineInternational Art/American Pop ArtPrints.

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 53

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54 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

Conservator’s Corner BY NADINE [email protected]

The Conservation Treatment of Joe Average’s Space Ship Go Bye Bye

After many years on display in a departure lounge at Vancouver International Airport, Joe Average’s largeacrylic painting Space Ship Go Bye Bye had sustained significant damage. Unprotected by any glass, thework, made up of four canvases spanning about 6 metres (20 feet) across, had hung above a row of seats,leaving it wide open to curious hands and marauding snacks.

Accretions such as fingerprints, pen and pencil, and food and drink particles had left the surfaceappearing severely dirty and uneven, altering the artist’s original intent. The accretions were apparentthroughout the whole piece but largely concentrated in the lower half of the canvases, especially along thebottom edge. Blows to the work from the front had also caused many large circular cracks that disfiguredthe image.

To return the paintings to their original appearance, the works were cleaned and the cracks werereduced. To remove all the loose dust and grime from the surface of the paintings, the pieces were firstvacuumed with a soft brush and then cleaned with an absorbent smoke sponge to remove fingerprints andother ingrained surface dirt. A solution of water and organic solvents was then used to clean more stub-born stains such as pen and pencil marks and food and drink splatters.

To flatten the circular cracks, the areas around the cracks were lightly humidified to allow a verycontrolled application of water to the canvas. The cracks were then treated with sturgeon glue, setwith heat and left under weights. In several areas, the cleaning had uncovered paint damaged by cor-rosive food and drink and disfiguring cracks and abrasions. These areas were inpainted with gouachemedia to match the colour and gloss of the original paint.

To protect the painting once it was returned to the airport, backing boards were installed to reducevibration, slow changes in environmental temperature and humidity, and prevent blows to the canvasfrom the back during transport and installation. Acrylic glazing was installed in front of the painting toprevent further damage from the “departure lounge elements.”

NEXT ISSUE: Fixatives in the Treatment of Textiles

Joe Average, Space Ship Go Bye Bye (1995), acrylic on canvas, after conservation treatment

Details of damaged areas before conservation treatment

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hfa contemporary320-1000 Parker St 604-876-7606 604-349-7606www.hodnettfineart.comby appt. Sep-Oct Noel Hodnett andJulie Pongrac, “New Endings”,paintings, drawings, fibre art, pho-tography and sculpture.

� Hot Art Wet City Gallery2206 Main St 604-764-2266 www.hotartwetcity.comwed-sat 12-5pm, tues by appt. Sep6-28 Frazer Adams and Dacosta,“Luxstar Innergalaktik”; Oct 3-26Boobies & Wieners, an immaturetribute to the nude; Oct 31-Nov 8 NoMemes No, art inspired by Internetmemes.

Howe Street Gallery of FineArt & The Soul of Africa Collection555 Howe St 604-681-5777 www.howestreetgallery.comdaily 10am-6pm. Now representingthe Chiurazzi Collection of artisticbronze sculptures in Canada, a por-tion of the national archive of Italiansculpture and artifacts. Chiurazzicastings are limited edition exactreplicas (or reductions) of the originalmasterpieces. The Chiurazzi Foundrywas selected by the Italian Ministry ofCultural Goods & Activities to takeplaster moulds of the original art-works in the museums in 1890.

Ian Tan Gallery2202 Granville St 604-738-1077 www.iantangallery.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 12-5pm. Sep7-Oct 3 Wim Blom, “Paintings Draw-ings Collages”, photo-realistic approachto painting images of uninhabited interi-ors, exploring the intrigue of hidden andsuggested space; Oct 5-24 GlennPayan, “Roads Travelled”, paintingswith sweeping forms and whimsicalstyle combined with a refined techniqueresult in work that is both endearing andcaptivating.

Initial Gallery2339 Granville St 604-428-4248 www.initialgallery.comNEW tues-sat 12-6pm. Thru Sep 12“Summer Art Fair”, features works byAngela Fama, Jessica Bell, RebeccaChaperon, Thomas Anfield, ByronDauncey, Jen Osborne, SuzanneMacRury and Andy Dixon; Sep 12-Oct17 Byron Dauncey, “Tempus Vernum”;

Oct 17-Nov 21Angela Fama and Rebec-ca Chaperon, “Cipher Messaging”.

Inuit Gallery of Vancouver206 Cambie St, Gastown604-688-7323 888-615-8399www.inuit.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 11-5pm. Sep12-26 Paddle Collection, paddlescarved and painted by NorthwestCoast First Nations artists; Oct 4-25Coral Harbour Sculpture, works byartists living in the remote Arctic com-munity of Coral Harbour; Oct 18-Nov 8Cape Dorset Annual Print Collection.

Jay Senetchko811 Carrall St (at Pacific)604-329-3544 www.senetchko.caSep 27 7-10pm Ticketed perform-ance; Sep 28 12-5pm Public walk-through. Jay Senetchko, “Industryand the Sleepwatchers”, reimaginednarrative of the relationship betweenSenetchko’s grandparents and thepositive and negative aspects of theoil and gas industry – installation,paintings – oil on canvas and paper,mixed media on paper. Sep 16-2510am-5pm open to the public –building the installation; Sep 27

Ticketed performance and event,proceeds to support SOLEFoodStreet Farms; Sep 28 12-5pm Opento the public to walk through theexhibition; Sep 29-30 10am-5pmOpen to the public – taking down theinstallation.

� Jennifer Kostuik Gallery1070 Homer St 604-737-3969 www.kostuikgallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm sun 1-5pm. Sep19-Oct 13 Patrick Pettersson, largepaintings consciously bring into playideas of equilibrium, harmony andcontrast, texture, and values in gener-al, having to do with the physical andabstract qualities of the medium; Oct17-Nov 15 David Burdeny, DianneBos, Catherine Nelson and JimKazanjian, “Realiteit”, photographyeither created by themselves or mon-taged into a print, or both, present theirinner and outer visions of reality; partof the Capture Photography Festival.

� Jeunesse Galleryof Fine Arts

2668 W 4th Ave 604-737-2438 www.jeunessegallery.comdaily 10am-6pm. Sep T. Schnell,

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56 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013cast at MAIDEN FOUNDRY • Sandy, Oregon U.S.A. • 1-800-422-8852

“Blue Moon”, new surrealistic works;Oct Ivan Drou, “Birds of Canada”,tempera paintings by Montreal artist.

Joyce WilliamsAntique Prints & Maps114-1118 Homer St, Yaletown604-688-7434 www.jwprintsandmaps.comtues-sat 11am-4pm. Offering a largeselection of antique maps, Japanesewoodblock prints, botanicals, archi-tecturals, natural history, 20th C.American, English, European andCanadian fine prints and featuringCharles van Sandwyk, etchings,watercolours, books and cards. Sep28-29 Visit us at the Vancouver BookFair at Robson Square, 800 RobsonStreet.

� Kafka’s Coffee & Tea2525 Main St 604-569-2967 www.kafkascoffee.camon-fri 7am-9pm sat & sun 8am-8pm. Thru Sept 15 Keith & Aya Ike-da-Barry: Heavy Skies & Lines; Sep19-Oct 21 Sarah Gee Miller; Oct 24-Nov 25 Joseph Wu.

Katherine McLean Studio1-1359 Cartwright St (Rear)Granville Island, in Railspur Alleyopposite Agro Cafe604-684-8452 604-377-6689www.katherinemclean.comwed-sun 11am-5pm or by chance.Sep-Oct Katherine McLean, newencaustic paintings and hand-builtceramics are further explorations ofthe rich colours and incandescentlight of the region, inspired by lastsummer’s painting trip to the south ofFrance.

Kimoto Gallery1525 W 6th Ave 604-428-0903604-230-5287 kimotogallery.comNEW tues-sat 10am-6pm. Sep 10-30 Katsumi Kimoto, Mel Yap, Jen-nifer Clark, Reuben Kambeitz,Christian Nicolay, Arvid Wangen,Jason Neve, Kapil Harnal, Angeli-ca Jang, Dina Goldstein and JimPark, “A Grand Opening”, paintingsand photographs; Oct 1-12 Chris-tian Nicolay and Ya-chu Kang, “Car-ry an Object with You”, multi-media,video and sound installation; Oct 14-28 Mel Yap, “Theory and Prob-lems”, photography; Oct 29-Nov 15Dina Goldstein, “In the Dollhouse”,photography.

Kozai Modern1515 W 6th Ave 604-677-8166 www.kozaimodern.common-sat 10am-6pm. Sep-Oct Tightly-edited collection of the very best oflocal West Coast hardwood studio fur-niture and lighting, featuring artisansBrent Comber, Peter Pierobon, ArntArntzen, Seiji Kuwabara, Steven Pol-lock, Judson Beaumont, Hyun SooHong, Fred Savage, Meagan Schaferand Jeff Trigg.

Lattimer Gallery1590 W 2nd Ave 604-732-4556 www.lattimergallery.common-sat 10am-5pm sun 11am-5pmholidays 12-5pm. Original works ofart by First Nations artists, includinggold and sterling silver jewellery,masks, panels, bentwood boxes,totem poles, argillite, sculptures,paintings and limited edition prints.Sep 21-Oct 12 “Silver Linings: Jew-ellery from the Open Sky”, theme ofthe open sky depicted in NorthwestCoast art features works by Landon

Gunn (Kwakwaka’wakw), SharifahMarsden (Ojibwa), Kelvin Thomp-son (Ojibwa/Saulteaux), Barry Wil-son (Haisla) and others, Sep 16online preview; Cody Lecoy: Recol-lection of a Dream, showcasing newworks in acrylic by this emergingCoast Salish artist who was men-tored by Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptunin 2011.

Leighdon Studio Gallerywww.leighdon.caThe Leighdon publications Artists ofBritish Columbia Volumes 1, 2 and3 are available through a variety ofgift shops, bookstores and galleriesthroughout BC. Visit the website formore information.

Malaspina Printmakers Society1555 Duranleau St, Granville Island604-688-1724 www.malaspinaprintmakers.common-fri 10am-5pm sat sun & holi-days 11am-5pm. Sep 13-29 NET-ETH: Going Out of the Darkness,group exhibition of over 20 contem-porary and traditional First Nationsartists, among them Indian residen-tial school survivors and theirdescendants, whose work is a pow-erful testimony to their personalhealing process; the exhibition spansthree venues: EMILY CARR UNIVERSITYOF ART + DESIGN (ECUAD), 1399 John-ston St, N Building, MALASPINA PRINT-MAKERS, 1555 Duranleau, and theURBAN ABORIGINAL FAIR TRADE GALLERYAT SKWACHAYS HEALING LODGE, 29 WPender Street.

Marion Scott Gallery2423 Granville St 604-685-1934 www.marionscottgallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm. Thru Sep 7 Keno-juak Ashevak, Mary Ayaq Anowtalik,Sheojuk Etidlooie, Jessie Oonark,Miriam Qiyuk, Nicotye Samayualie,Lucy Tasseor and Oviloo Tunnillie,“Eight Women”, up to 40 works byartists from Nunavut include drawings,prints, sculptures and textiles; Oct 5-Nov 9 Jutai Toonoo: Nice Day, newworks on paper and sculptures byCape Dorset artist.

Masters Gallery2245 Granville St 604-558-4244 www.vancouver-mastersgalleryltd.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Specializing inhistorical Canadian art: CanadianImpressionism, The Group of Seven

Christian Nicolay and Ya-chu Kang, Carry anObject With You (2013), multi-media, videoand sound installation [Kimoto, VancouverBC, Oct 1-12]

Gigi Hoeller, Retreat Cove, Galiano Island [SunshineCoast, BC, [email protected], www.gigibutterfly.com, 604-885-6650]

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and their contemporaries, CanadianGroup of Painters, 20th C. BritishColumbia artists, and historical pho-tography. Ongoing Historical pho-tography of BC and rotating exhibi-tions of fine Canadian art.

Monny’s Art Gallery2675 W 4th Ave 604-733-2082 www.envisionoptical.camon-sat 11am-6pm. Gallery of long-time collector Monny has a perma-nent collection of artwork as well asrotating exhibitions of local artistsAndrea Gower, Kerensa Haynes,Ted Hesketh, Sonia Kobrahel andStanimir Stoylov.

Morris and Helen BelkinArt GalleryUniversity of British Columbia1825 Main Mall 604-822-2759 www.belkin.ubc.catue-fri 10am-5pm, sat & sun 12-5pm,closed holidays. Sep 6-Dec 1 “Wit-nesses: Art and Canada’s Indian Res-idential Schools”, work arising fromthe history of Indian residentialschools in Canada and those who arewitnesses to its ongoing impact;includes Joane Cardinal-Schubert,Alex Janvier and Norval Morrisseau;works have been sourced fromacross Canada and borrowed fromartists, collectors and museums.

Museum of AnthropologyUniversity of British Columbia6393 NW Marine Dr 604-822-5087 www.moa.ubc.cawed-sun 10am-5pm tues 10am-9pm.Admission: adults $16.75, students &seniors 65+ $14.50, UBC staff, stu-dents & faculty free with ID, family$40, children 6 and under free, tues 5-9pm $9, groups included. Thru Sep15 Safar/Voyage: ContemporaryWorks by Arab, Iranian and TurkishArtists; Sep 18-Mar 2 Speaking toMemory: Images and Voices fromSt. Michael’s Indian ResidentialSchool; Thru Sep 29 Paradise Lost?Contemporary Works from the Pacif-ic; Oct 26-Mar 30 The MarvellousReal: Art from Mexico, 1926-2011.

Museum of Vancouver1100 Chestnut St, Vanier Park604-736-4431 www.museumofvancouver.catues-sun 10am-5pm, thurs 10am-8pm. Admission: adults $12, seniors& students $10, youth 5-17 $8, chil-

dren 4 and under free, family (2 adults& 2 youth) $35. Opens Oct 17 PlayHouse: The Architecture of DanielEvan White, one of Vancouver’s mostinnovative residential architects; ThruDec 31 Foncie’s Fotos, a look at thelast man standing from Vancouver’sgreat era of post-war street photogra-phy; Ongoing Neon Vancouver/UglyVancouver, Vancouver’s love/haterelationship with neon signs and thevisual purity crusade that virtuallybanished neon signs from Vancouverstreets; Vancouver History Galleries,stories from the early 1900s to the late1970s.

Or Gallery555 Hamilton St 604-683-7395 www.orgallery.orgtues-sat 12-5pm. Sep 7-Oct 12Lynne Marsh, “Plänterwald”, a videodocumenting a former GDR amuse-ment park built in 1969 and aban-doned after unification.

Pacific Home and Art Centre1560 W 6th Ave 604-566-9889 www.pacifichome.camon & sat 10am-5pm, tues-fri 10am-6pm. Featuring mouth-blown glasscollections from local and internation-al glass artists. New – Oscar Zanetti,

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glass sculptures by the Murano cal-cedonia glass artist, also showingcontemporary paintings by localartists – abstracts, landscapes, etc.

PAL (Performing ArtsLodge) Theatre581 Cardero St www.palvancouver.orgsat & sun 11am-4:30pm. Oct 19-20Art Unbound and Found, FromsonFourth Annual Juried Art Exhibition,fine and found art created by resi-dents of the Performing Arts Lodge.

� Pendulum Gallery885 W Georgia St (HSBC Building)604-250-9682 www.pendulumgallery.bc.camon-wed 9am-5pm thur-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm. Sep 16-29 ArtsUmbrella Splash 2013, annual exhi-bition and auction includes painting,sculpture and craft from the city’s topartists; Sep 30-Oct 16 Greg Gorman,

works by American portrait photog-rapher, known for his insightful andprovocative images of Hollywoodicons; Oct 18-Nov 9 Craft Invested:10,000 Hours, celebrating the 40thAnniversary of the Craft Council witha wide-ranging group show high-lighting the state of craft today.

Petley Jones Gallery1554 W 6th Ave 604-732-5353 www.petleyjones.common-sat 10am-6pm. Sep 12-26 AnnVandervelde, “A Pool of Life Reflect-ing Water”, new works; Oct 24-Nov 7Paddy McCann, new paintings.

Rennie Collection51 E Pender St 604-682-2088 www.renniecollection.orgReservation is required. Bookingsshould be made through the form onthe website. There is no charge foradmission. Thru Oct 5 Pablo Bron-stein, Aaron Curry, Andrew Grassie,

Louise Lawler, Mike Nelson, RomanOndak and Ian Wallace, “Summer2013: Collected Works”.

Republic Gallery732 Richards St, 3rd Flr 604-632-1590 www.republicgallery.comtue-sat 10am-5pm and by appt. Sep6-Oct 12 Jim Breukelman, “Out ofFiction”, photographs – new workshighlight recent experimentationwith photo assemblage and borrowfrom both fantasy and reality.

Robinson Studio Gallery440-1000 Parker St 604-254-8744 www.robinsonstudio.com10am-4pm and by appt. The gallerywill be an ongoing local venue whereconsultants, art dealers and individ-ual collectors may view the work ofCanadian sculptor David Robinson.The gallery is also available for art-work and location rental.

58 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

www.contemporaryartgallery.ca

Mike NelsonCONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Sep 14-Nov 3, 2013 British artist Mike Nelson isinternationally famous for extravagant conceptual installations that use series of rooms and adjoining cor-ridors to equate spatial structure to literary narrative. Nelson has been known to take three months toinstall one of his large-scale, immersive installations. They are intentionally metaphoric and disorientat-ing, and at the same time illustrate asense of meaning and place beyondwhat a linear narrative could pro-vide. The bizarre, stage-like setshave been described as having “araw, wooden hokeyness, a rankness,a stench of bitter memories.”

In this show, Nelson’s firstsolo exhibition in Canada, the Con-temporary Art Gallery is presentinga continuation of the work he firstconceived in 1996, entitled TheAmnesiac. The CAG exhibit featurestwo installations. The first combinesflotsam and jetsam collected off localshores with an imaginary cast of out-sider characters, inviting visitors “to become lost in the substrata of society.” The second new piece is asequence of projected 35-millimetre slides produced during recent road trips across British Columbiaand into Alberta. Collectively, they trace movement across the landscape, underscore the intervention ofpeople with the land, and revisit notions of identity and cultural imperialism.

Nelson represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in 2011 and has twice been nominated for theTurner Prize. He has had more than 20 solo exhibitions in cities like London, Birmingham, Malmo, NewYork, Nice, Copenhagen, Barcelona, Geneva, Rome and Melbourne, and his work been represented inmore than 60 group shows. He is currently based in London. Mia Johnson

Mike Nelson, AMNESIAC SHRINE or Double coop displacement (2006), site-specificinstallation, mixed media [Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver BC, Sep 14-Nov 3]

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Satellite Gallery560 Seymour St, 2nd Flr604-681-8425 www.satellitegallery.cawed-fri 12-6pm. Sep 13-Oct 26 Ans-payaxw: an installation for voice,image, and sound by John Wynne,sound and photographic installationfor 12 channels of audio diffusion –sounds and voices recorded in collab-oration with Gitxsan communitymembers in and around the reserve atAnspayaxw (Kispiox), in the SkeenaRiver area of BC, created in 2010 byWynne with photography by DeniseHawrysio; Rebecca Belmore, TanyaTagaq, Luke Parnell, GuadalupeMartinez, Abbas Akhavan, JamieLook, Ali Ahadi, Erin Siddall, CarlosColín and Brianne Nord-Stewart,“Ten Thousand Suns”, works insculpture, audio, video and perform-ance that consider the layered inter-connections of policy with respect toresource-based development projectsin Canada and globally, modern tech-nology and artistic practice.

� Sidney and GertrudeZack Gallery

Jewish Community Centre950 W 41st Ave604-638-7277 604-257-5111jccgv.com/content/jcc-cultural-artsmon-thurs 9am-10:30pm fri 9am-Shabbat closing (varies throughoutthe year) sat closed sun 9:30am-9pm. Thru Sept 8 Lola: My FourthLife, paintings and projections – artawakening in a 91-year-old Holo-caust survivor; Sep 12-Oct 6 DarcyMann, “Into the Forest”, drawingsand paintings, glimpses from theartist’s arboreal wanderings; Oct 10-Nov 10 Jazmin Sasky, “HonouringWomen”, paintings, a tribute to thewomen she has met or has come toknow in Vancouver since movinghere from Buenos Aires in 2004.

SMASH Gallery of Modern Art580 Clark Dr 604-251-3262 604-353-4064www.smashmodernart.comwed-fri 11am-5pm and by appt. ThruSep 21 Jay Hanscom: Rebel, newworks; Oct 18-Nov 16 Art Perry:Facing Ireland, photographs andportraits of Ireland.

Spirit Wrestler Gallery47 Water St, Gastown604-669-8813 888-669-8813www.spiritwrestler.com

mon-sat 10am-6pm sun & holidays12-5pm. Sep 14-Oct 5 Kenojuak –The Light of Happiness, Celebrat-ing the Life and Career of KenojuakAshevak CC, RCA (1927-2013), ret-rospective of artworks by the leg-endary Inuit master graphic artistand sculptor.

Teck Gallery515 W Hastings St 778-782-4266www.sfu.ca/galleryopen daily during campus hours.Thru Apr 27, 2014 Instant Coffee:The hero, the villain, the salesman,the parent, a sidekick and a ser-vant, artist collective Instant Coffeepresents a new installation that oper-ates as a stage or set for social fram-ing and interaction, testing thegallery as a site for socially engagedcontemporary art projects – theinstallation considers theatrical his-tories and the title evokes stock char-acters in Victorian melodramas.

Toni Onley Estate604-779-2249 604-454-1928www.tonionley.comby appt. Representing the Estate: inVictoria, Winchester Galleries; in

Vancouver, Granville Fine Art and ArtBeatus; in Calgary, Wallace Galleries.For watercolour workshops, LynnOnley, 604-779-2249.

Trench Contemporary Art102-148 Alexander St 604-681-2577www.trenchgallery.comwed-fri 12-6pm sat 12-5pm or byappt. Sep 19-Oct 26 David Marshall,“To See Far”, sculptures and sculptur-al drawings – the product of a lifetimeof dedication, patience and precisionby this late Canadian sculptor; JeffWall, small series of photographsdocumenting the late artist’s EastVancouver studio.

UNIT/PITT Projects236 E Pender St 604-681-6740 www.unitpitt.cawed-sat: 12-5pm, daily: video screen-ings 5-9pm, daily: radio 24 hrs. NewLocation: Sep 13-Oct 26 Amphib-ian14, Bracken Hanuse Corlett,KAST, Byron Steele and Nigel Z,“God Save The Queen”, curated byChris Bose; Oct 24-27 Wrong Wave2013: Revenge of the New Puritan,festival of music by artists; visit thewebsite for locations and artists;

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Ongoing Video screenings in frontwindow every day from 5 to 9pm; 24hours within one block of the galleryUNIT/PITT Radio 89.7 FM, projectsand music by artists, and audio docu-mentation.

Unitarian Church of Vancouver949 W 49th Ave 604-261-7204 www.vancouverunitarians.casun 10am-1:30pm or phone forhours. Sep 16-Oct 15 Carol McQuaidtransforms her sketches into linocutprints with a focus on cityscapes ofVancouver and her many travels;Danyne Johnston, acrylic and water-colour paintings of water scenes,landscapes and florals; Oct 12-Nov 12Chris Pearce, old and new water-colours, acrylics, pastels, charcoaland ink, creating portraits and tex-tured landscapes with inspirationsfrom nature.

Uno Langmann Limited2117 Granville St 604-736-8825 800-730-8825www.langmann.comtues-sat 10am-5pm or by appt. Sep“Al Fresco”, captures figures enjoy-ing a tranquil escape in lush, sceniclandscapes removed from the hustleand bustle of city life, includes worksby Hendrik F. van Lint, Maxime Eti-enne Vallee, Frederik J.A. Winther,Hans Dahl and others; Oct “An Ital-ian Sojourn”, an essential touristdestination for centuries, Italy is cap-tured by artists showcasing thecountry’s distinct landscape, dynam-ic views and unique light, includesworks by Antoine Bouvard, FelixFrancois G.P. Ziem, Alfred Pollen-tine, Edward Alfred Goodall andothers; Ongoing a selection of fineantiques and objets d’art.

Vancouver Art Gallery750 Hornby St604-662-4719 (24-hr info line) www.vanartgallery.bc.cadaily 10am-5pm, tues 10am-9pm.Admission: adults $20, seniors (65+)$15, students $15, children 5-12 $6,children 4 and under free, family(maximum 2 adults, 2 children) $54,members free. Reference Librarywed-fri 1-5pm. Thru Sep 15 GrandHotel; Persuasive Visions: 17thCentury Dutch and Flemish Master-works and Contemporary Reflec-tions; Oct 11-26 Kimsooja, “Unfold-ing”, retrospective exhibition; Oct

26-Feb 2 Charles Edenshaw (1839-1920), first major survey of Haidaartist, over 200 pieces from publicand private collections; Thru Oct 14Martin Honert; Portraits in Time;Thru Dec 8 In Dialogue with Carr:Gareth Moore – Allochthonous Win-dow; Thru Jan 2014 James Hart,“The Dance Screen (The ScreamToo)”; Thru Mar 9, 2014 Emily Carrin Haida Gwaii; Offsite 1100 WGeorgia St thru Sep 29 MadeInCompany, “Calm”, a site-specificsculpture that evokes the endlesslychanging cityscape that has becometypical in many urban centres of theworld; Oct 17-Mar 20 Mark Lewis,films.

Vancouver HolocaustEducation Centre50-950 W 41st Ave 604-264-0499www.vhec.orgmon-thurs 9am-5pm fri 9am-4pm.Thru Oct 11 Enemy Aliens: TheInternment of Jewish Refugees inCanada, 1940-1943 – in 1940 Canadaagreed to Britain’s request to aid thewar effort by taking in “enemy aliens”and prisoners of war, about 2,300civilian refugees from Nazism, most ofthem Jews. After a brief period ofinternment in England, they weredeported to Canada and imprisoned inNew Brunswick, Ontario and Quebecalongside political refugees and, insome camps, avowed Nazis; Oct 29-Dec 4 Nazi Persecution of Homosex-uals 1933-1945 – the United States

Holocaust Memorial Museum’s exhi-bition explores the Third Reich’sefforts at destroying all internal bio-logical threats to the “Aryan” nation’shealth, including homosexual men.

Vancouver Maritime Museum1905 Ogden Ave 604-257-8300 www.vancouvermaritimemuseum.comtues-sat 10am-5pm sun 12-5pm,*thurs: 5-8pm, by donation. Admis-sion (+GST): $11 adults, $8.50 stu-dents, seniors, youth, $30 family, 5and under free. *Discounts availableduring St. Roch closure. Thru Oct 13Tattoos & Scrimshaw: The Art of theSailor, contemporary photographsused in conversation with historicalscrimshaw. The exhibition discussesnotions of ‘art’ around two practicesborn out of the need to capture amoment by those who spent theirlives at sea.

The Waterfall Building1540 W 2nd Ave, Plaza 205604-727-2757 250-715-0089 www.richardroblin.comtues-sun 11am-6pm or by appt. Sep22-Oct 24 Richard Roblin, “Here &Now”, paintings.

Wil Aballe Art Projects/WAAP528-2050 Scotia St, Buzzer 189778-229-3458 www.waapart.comsat 1-5pm tues 6-9pm and by appt.Sep 5-Oct 5 Jonah Samson, “Our Ladyof the Flowers of Evil”, new works; Sep19 7-9pm Mark Delong, “Beware ofDog”, edition launch; Oct 10-Nov 2Scott Massey, “Spectrum Studies”;Oct 17 7-9pm Jason Gowans, “Studyfor Tonik Wojtyra”, edition launch.

Winsor Gallery258 E 1st Ave 604-681-4870 www.winsorgallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm, sun & mon byappt. Thru Sep 14 “Summer GroupShow”, works by gallery artistsincluding Dana Claxton, AttilaRichard Lukacs, Angela Gross-mann, Allan Switzer, Paul Wong,Brian Howell, Fiona Ackerman andmore; Sep 19-Nov 2 Dana Claxton,“Indian Candy”, print media and pho-tographic works – aluminum-mount-ed chromogenic prints that speakvolumes on how indigenous iconog-raphy has been used and consumedby popular culture. Material sourcedfrom the University of British Colum-bia’s Wild West archive.

60 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

Mairi Budreau, Mark Recchi, detail (2012),oil on canvas, in solo exhibition Walks ofLife – Significant People of Kamloops BC[Main Gallery, The Old Courthouse,Kamloops BC, Oct 5-26]

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Ashpa Naira Gallery & Studio9492 Houghton Rd 250-549-4249 www.ashpanairagallery.comopen May 1-Oct 15 sun 10am-5pm orby appt. Located on the west side ofOkanagan Lake, this contemporaryart gallery and studio, owned by artistCarolina Sanchez de Bustamante,features original art in a home andgarden setting. Discover a diversegroup of emerging and establishedOkanagan and Canadian artists inpainting, textile, sculpture, ceramic,glass and functional art.

Vernon Public Art Gallery3228 31st Ave 250-545-3173 www.vernonpublicartgallery.common-fri 10am-5pm sat 11am-4pm.Thru Oct 10 Kristoff Steinruck, “TheMarble Range”, installation of carvedstone elements with photographyand video; Marissa Brown, “Friendsand Lovers”, portraiture-basedpaintings address issues of thehuman condition; Cherryville ArtistsAssociation Members, “Artist orArtisan: Where is the Line?”, group

exhibition; Thru Oct 31 Joanne Sale,“Connections”, inspired by complexvisual structures embodied in nature;Opens Oct 24 Stephen Foster, “Re-mediating Curtis”, interactive videoand photography installation using3-D techniques based on the repre-sentation of West Coast culture;Sookinchoot Youth Group.

Alcheringa Gallery665 Fort St 250-383-8224 www.alcheringa-gallery.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 1-5pm orby appt. Thru Sep 14 “Our BlanketsOur Stories”, Coast Salish artistChris Paul and Tlingit artist MarkPreston celebrate the culture and anenduring bond of friendship in thecreation of this exhibition of master-works; some of the works will refer-ence historical pieces, other workswill offer a contemporary, personaltake; Sep 19-Oct 19 Exhibition bygallery artists Rande Cook, lessLIE,Chris Paul, Mark Preston, DylanThomas, Teddy Balangu and MichaelTimbin.

� Art Gallery ofGreater Victoria

1040 Moss St 250-384-4171 www.aggv.catues-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pmsun 12-5pm. Sep 20-Jan 12 “UrbanThunderbirds/Ravens in a MaterialWorld”, two-part installation exploresissues related to urban life and con-sumer culture through paintings,prints, photography and mixed-mediainstallation. The artists push theboundaries of form, language andmaterial, providing new perspectivesfor consideration. lessLIE and DylanThomas, “Urban Thunderbirds”, andFrancis Dick and Rande Cook,“Ravens in a Material World”; ThruSep 22 Fanciful Banko: JapaneseCeramics, pieces produced in Japanin the late 19th and early 20th cen-turies as popular export items; ThruNov 3 Masterful Images: The Art ofKiyoshi Saito (1907-1997), one of thegrand masters of the 20th C. Japan-ese print movement known as sosakuhanga, meaning “original creativeprint”; Thru Nov 10 Chris Bose,Kristina Campbell, Marina Roy,Grace Salez and Kevin Schmidt,“Crossing Channels”, explores media

VERNON

VICTORIA

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www.winchestergalleriesltd.com�

Tony Urquhart: Retrospective WINCHESTER GALLERIES IN OAK BAY, VICTORIA BC – Sep 10-28, 2013 Tony Urquhart writes, “I was delighted when theWinchester Gallery offered me a ‘retrospective’.... It hasbeen a true pleasure to pore over, reconsider, and then selecta number of drawings, works on paper, oils and sculptures,revisiting the thoughts and ideas that inspired me along theway. I have had a long and very fruitful career, and the worksin this show span a period from a 1965 drawing exhibited atExpo ’67 up to and including a 2013 oil wash....”

Urquhart earned early recognition for his innovativeabstract work, and is particularly well known for his interac-tive opening boxes. Predominantly non-representational, hiswork is extremely mysterious, although often suggestive ofarchitecture, landscape and biological forms.

A founder of CARFAC (Canadian Artists Representa-tion), Urquhart was named to the Order of Canada in 1995and received a Governor General’s award for Visual Arts in2009. He taught drawing, painting and printmaking at theUniversity of Waterloo from 1972 until his retirement in1999, and has been invited to exhibit his work at many presti-gious galleries, including MOMA and the Musée d’Art Mod-erne de la Ville de Paris. Christine Clark

Tony Urquhurt, The Red Emblem (1989), watercolour[Winchester Galleries, Oak Bay, Victoria BC, Sep 10-28]

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art from across the country, inspiredby a publication produced by Media-Net; Thru Dec 8 The Sisters of St.Ann, “Nurturing the Creative Spirit”,18 paintings from the art collection ofthe Sisters of St. Ann (SSA) weretransferred to AGGV in 2011; OngoingEmily Carr: On the Edge of Nowhere,historical survey focuses on her influ-ences and inspirations.

Avenue Gallery2184 Oak Bay Ave 250-598-2184 www.theavenuegallery.common-sat 10am-5:30pm sun 12-4pm,open most holidays 12-4pm. ThruSep 7 Angela Morgan and CrystalHeath, paintings and collaborations;Oct 27-Nov 7 Bi Yuan Cheng, “Lumi-nous”, paintings.

Dales Gallery537 Fisgard St 250-383-1552 www.dalesgallery.camon-fri 10am-5pm sat 11am-4pm.Sep 9-Oct 10 Caitlin Ambery, “JustBefore Dawn”, new works; Oct 15-29Inside Community: Four Cultures inImages, photo-documentary projectwith the Inter-Cultural Association ofGreater Victoria (ICA), The AfricanHeritage Association of VancouverIsland (AHAVI), India Canada CulturalAssociation (ICCA), Victoria Filipino

Canadian Association (VFCA), Victo-ria Nikkei Cultural Society (VNCS)and local documentary photographerand educator Quinton Gordon.

Deluge Contemporary Art636 Yates St 250-385-3327 www.deluge.wswed-sat 12-5pm. Thru Sep 28 CloudQuarry: Amy Brener|Michael Doerk-sen, exhibition introduces a conver-sation between the recent works ofBrener and Doerksen, builders ofsculptural worlds happily operatingon both micro and macroscopic lev-els. They create objects that support(and contain) dichotomies of thematerial and the intangible – controland chance; Oct 18-Nov 3 Antimatter[Media Art], dedicated to the exhibi-tion and nurturing of diverse forms ofmedia art, one of the premier show-cases of experimentation in fi lm,encompassing screenings, instal-lations, performances and mediahybrids. See www.antimatter.ws formore information.

Gallery at the Mac3 Centennial Sq, McPherson Playhouse Lobby 250-361-0800 www.rmts.bc.caView during performances or byappt. Thru Nov 18 LOWER SPACE &

UPPER SPACE Wendy Oppelt, PaulShepherd and April Ponsford,“Space & Time”.

Gallery in the Oak Bay Village2223A Oak Bay Ave 250-598-9890 [email protected] 10am-5pm sat 10am-3pm.Featuring original artwork by leadinglocal artists Kathryn Amisson, JoanBaron, Sid Barron, Andres Bohaker,Jeffery Boron, Wendy Bradley, Jan-ice Bridgman, Eileen Fong, RobertGenn, Caren Heine, Harry Heine,Jennifer Heine, Mark Heine, KeithHiscock, Evguenia Ioganov, ShawnA. Jackson, Brian R. Johnson, DavidLadmore, Ernest Marza, JoaneMoran, Allan Myndzak, Paul Paque-tte, Nicholas Pearce, Natasha Perks,Sandu Singh and Linny D. Vine.

Legacy Art Gallery630 Yates St 250-721-6562 www.legacygallery.cawed-sat 10am-4pm. MAIN GALLERYThru Oct 29 “Core Samples”,overview of the University of Victo-ria’s Visual Arts Dept from its earliestdays, painting, printmaking, drawing,photography and sculpture. Worksby 18 artists who were also appoint-ed faculty members, including JohnDobereiner, Donald Harvey, Pat

62 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

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Martin Bates, Gwen Curry, DouglasMorton, Roland Brener, MowryBaden and Fred Douglas, reflect arange of media and groundbreakingartistic practice.

Madrona Gallery606 View St 250-380-4660 www.madronagallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm sun & mon11am-5pm. Sep 12-26 Luke Ram-sey, “Offlines”; Oct 19-Nov 2 Cor-rinne Wolcoski, “Solo Exhibition”.

Maltwood Prints and Drawings Gallery at the McPherson LibraryUniversity of Victoria3800 Finnerty Rd 250-721-6562 www.uvac.uvic.caAdjacent to Special Collections on theground level; call 250-721-6673 forlibrary hours. Thru Nov 18 FrancisDick, Charles Elliott, Richard Hunt,Tim Paul and Moy Sutherland, “Coa-lescence: Bridging Contemporaneityand Tradition”, prints – use of tradi-tional stylistic elements and culturalreferences to express contemporaryexperience; additional themes includeenvironmentalism, the Christian faith,

cultural revival, commercialization,mentorship and personal relation-ships. Works are from the Universityof Victoria’s extensive NorthwestCoast print collection.

Metchosin Art Gallery4495 Happy Valley Rd 250-478-9223 www.metchosinartgallery.cathurs-sun 12-5pm. Sep 5-29 TheVancouver Island Surface DesignAssociation, “Current Threads 2013”,group show of fibre artists; Oct 3-Nov3 Lorna Bergen, Jan Dong and NancyDolan, “Gratitude with Attitude”,works by abstract artists.

Open Space Arts Society510 Fort St 250-383-8833 www.openspace.catues-sat 12-5pm. Sep 13-28 TanyaDoody, “Impression Formation”,ceramics – a series of impressionstaken from the fatigued surfaces ofOpen Space’s interior, examining thebuilding’s physical and social histo-ries; Oct 6-Mar 2014 IndigenousYouth Artists Showcase, participants(ages 15 to 24) work with Indigenousartist mentors, elders and seniorartists on their artistic visions, prac-

tice and career paths; Sep 2013-Jun2014 Cameron Kidd, artist-in-resi-dence, Open Space Arts Society com-missioned Kidd to give the back wallnew life as part of a continuingseries of community murals withparticipation from invited youth.

Out of the Mist Gallery740 Douglas St 250-480-4930 www.outofthemistgallery.common-sat 10am-5pm sun 12-3pm orby appt. Thru Sep 20 The Spoon asArt and Utensil, collection of North-west Coast First Nations spoons, fea-ture a rare 18th C. figural spoon witha crouching wolf figure from a Scot-tish collection, the subject of anongoing research project.

Polychrome Fine Art977-A Fort St 250-382-2787 www.polychromefinearts.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 12-26 MarkSchmiedl, “Syncretic Caves”, abstractpaintings that define their own spacethrough painterly gestures and subtlecolour shifts; Oct 3-17 Lance AustinOlsen, “Blood and Memory”, recentpaintings on paper and drypointprints, book launch of Images From

www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 63

2184 OAK BAY AVENUE, VICTORIA 250-598-2184www.theavenuegallery.com

THE AVENUE

GALLERY

October 27 - November 7Bi Yuan Cheng LuminousARTISTS’ RECEPTION OCTOBER 27TH 12 - 3

Image | Wild Pacific30”x 40” oil on canvas

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64 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

Practical Art History, orConfessions of a Fine Art AppraiserChapter 38. The Case of Resale Royalties, Part 2

One would think that if the renowned and well-respected Newfoundland artist Mary Pratt, as well asCARFAC (the Canadian Artists’ Representation), publicly supports the creation of a resale royalty,then it’s probably a good idea whose time is long overdue.

In fact, CARFAC has been lobbying members of parliament and officials for years to introducesuch a system. The resale royalty, currently under pre-budget proposal by the federal government,would stipulate that a 5% royalty of the sale price of an artwork be returned to the artist. Theoretical-ly, perhaps because it appeals to a humanist tradition founded on “doing the right thing,” this schemewould alleviate some of the tensions that exist between art, artists and commerce in the art kingdom.

In a recent Art in America article entitled “Art and Commerce,” writer Douglas Dreishpoon quotesMatthew Marks, a well-known American dealer and proprietor of galleries in New York and Los Ange-les, as proclaiming that he does not believe in the Resale Royalty Act “because the only people who ben-efitted from it are already successful artists or their estates.” Marks goes on to suggest that the resale roy-alty “does not help those artists who could actually use the money, whose work has no resale market.”

Marks is making an important distinction here between a primary and a secondary (that is, resale)market, and between the types ofbuyers in those markets, each typepurchasing artwork for complete-ly different reasons.

By using the term “successful”in describing artists, Marks appearsto mean those artists who havedeveloped a primary market fortheir work – usually achievedthrough gallery representation –and, by default, a secondary mar-ket, too. The secondary marketbuyer usually makes investmentdecision purchases based on the

reputation and credibility of the artist, which have been developed to some extent through a history ofgallery sales. Thus, the dealer is partly responsible for creating both a primary and a secondary market foran artist’s work and, ultimately, for creating society’s recognition of the artist as “successful.” In this sense,then, it seems that “successful” can sometimes mean an artist who is an income-generating unit managedby the dealer. Mary Pratt, as a successful Canadian artist, would be a case in point. She is one who wouldbenefit from a resale royalty because of her reputation. Her work has a resale market.

However, I don’t believe that those not-so-successful artist members of CARFAC would gain thesame benefit offered by such a royalty. The primary market for consumer art generally consists of peo-ple who buy because they like what they see: their decisions to purchase are aesthetically or intellectu-ally based. These purchases are not usually dealer-advised investments. And, true, the large majority ofwork bought by the art-buying public is by lesser-known artists. Yet, those artists are the ones who, byMarks’s definition, are not totally successful. They’re the ones the resale royalty should benefit, butwho, because of their lack of wide recognition, do not have multiple resales of their artwork and there-fore would not see any royalty benefit. Secondary market sales of their work are almost non-existent,partly because of their perceived lack of investment potential.

And so it goes …

Next Issue: The Case of Nano-D Technology

BY JIM FINLAYFINLAY FINE ART

www.FinlayFineArt.com

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Sound at opening; Oct 24-Nov 7 JMclaughlin, “Instant”, acrylic paint-ings in signature Island City Style jux-tapose found text and advertisingimages.

� Red Art Gallery2033 Oak Bay Ave 250-881-0462 www.redartgallery.catues-sat 12-4pm, first thurs 12-8pm.Sep 17-28 Corre Alice, Jan Henry,Carolyn Kowalyk and Alison Watt,“Ab Fab 2 – Absolutely FabulousAbstracts Show”, abstract paintings;Oct 29-Nov 13 Elizabeth Litton, “TheTorch”, explores different aspects ofwar heroes and heroines, and thedwindling number of veterans alive toshare their stories of the World Wars.

The Robert Bateman Centre470 Belleville St 250-940-3630 www.batemancentre.orgSep: sun-wed 10am-6pm thurs-sat10am-9pm, Oct: tues-sun 10am-5pm. Robert Bateman, a living leg-end, straddles the world of art andnature. The centre’s permanent exhi-bition contains 160 works, from thelargest original painting to the small-est drawing.

Royal BC Museum675 Belleville St 250-356-7226 888-447-7977www.royalbcmuseum.bc.casun-wed 10am-5pm thurs-sat 10am-10pm. The Royal BC Museum is aplace of discovery. Through uniquegalleries, the museum and archivesshowcase the human and natural his-tory of British Columbia and bring intemporary exhibitions from aroundthe world. Thru Sep 29 Tradition inFelicities: Celebrating 155 Years ofVictoria Chinatown History; Thru Oct14 Race to the End of the Earth, the1912 epic contest between RoaldAmundsen and his Norwegian teamversus Robert Falcon Scott and hisBritish team to be the first to reachthe South Pole.

Slide Room GalleryVancouver Island School of Art2549 Quadra St 250-380-3500 www.slideroomgallery.common-fri 9am-5pm, weekends byappt. Sep 6-Oct 28 Jeremy Herndl:Artist in Residence, selections fromworks produced during the summerat VISA and from previous series;Nov 1-Dec 2 Repetition & Differ-

ence, 30”x 30” works for sale by 30local artists in multiple media –response to a painting by GerhardRichter, curated by Efren Quinoz.

West End Gallery1203 Broad St 250-388-0009 877-388-0009www.westendgalleryltd.common-fri 10am-5:30pm sat 10am-5pmsun 11am-4pm. Sep 21-Oct 3 StevenArmstrong, “Collected Landscapes forAutumn”, paintings – landscapes thatare easily recalled and often fondlyremembered, emblematic of an endur-ing personal history, yet remaining visu-ally accessible to a wider audience; Oct5-17 Rod Charlesworth, “Wet Paint”,paintings – explores the grand traditionof capturing the Canadian landscape oncanvas and the committment to paintimages that have a strong Canadian cul-tural influence.

Winchester Galleries2260 Oak Bay Ave 250-595-2777Winchester Modern: 758 Humboldt St250-382-7750; Winchester Galleries:796 Humboldt St 250-386-2773www.winchestergalleriesltd.com2260 Oak Bay Ave: tues-sat 10am-

� OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS PREVIEW 65

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5:30pm, 758 Humboldt St: tues-sat10am-5:30pm, 796 Humboldt St:tues-sat 10am-5:30pm. 2260 OAKBAY AVE Sep 10-28 Tony Urquhart:Retrospective; Joseph Plaskett at95 Years: A Celebration!; Oct TBA;758 HUMBOLDT ST Sep 7-Oct 5 DavidMacWilliam, Kendra Wallace andAndrew Wright; Oct 12-Nov 9 JeanPaul Riopelle and Rita Letendre;796 HUMBOLDT ST Sep 21-Oct 12Deirdre Roberts, “Quiet Mystery:Near and Far”, new watercolours; Oct26-Nov 16 The Limners.

Xchanges Gallery6E-2333 Government St 250-382-0442 www.xchangesgallery.orgsat & sun 12-4pm. Sep 6-29 KarenHibbard, “kittykaraoke”, installation –homage to the volunteerism of seniorwomen and their pivotal role in defin-ing and maintaining a sense of ‘com-munity’; Oct 4-27 Graham Ereaux,“The Walls of Utopia”, photographstaken at night without shoppers atmalls, parking lots and streets – anattempt at depicting the remnants ofthe consumerist landscape when theact of consuming and the presence ofpeople are removed.

Buckland Southerst Gallery2460 Marine Dr 604-922-1915 www.bucklandsoutherst.common-sat 10am-5:30pm. Introducingthe work of Karen Curry, Brian Eby,Maria Josenhans, Shirley Williams,Elizabeth Topham, Georgina Farah,Yuan Cheng Bi and Pei Yang. Also fea-turing paintings by Adam Noonan andTatjana Mirkov-Popovicki; still lifesand landscapes by Alessandra Bitelli;European market and garden scenesby Wilson Chu; street scenes andcityscapes by Morgan Dunnet; stilllifes and streets by Brian Harvey; Tus-can and Sicilian landscapes by RitaMonaco; landscapes by Iola Scott;world scenes by Henry Huai Xu andglimpses of life by Lorena Ziraldo.

Ferry Building GalleryWest Vancouver Cultural Services1414 Argyle Ave, Ambleside Landing604-925-7290 www.ferrybuildinggallery.comtues-sun 11am-5pm. Thru Sep 8Cheryl Painter, Mary Touhey, Jo-

anne Waters and Leslie McGuffin,“Life’s A Beach”, mixed media; Sep10-29 West Vancouver Fire Muse-um, “Fire”, paintings, artifacts andfire trucks; Oct 1-20 Lynne Green,“Interpretations of the Spiritual inNature II”, paintings, sculpture andprintmaking; Oct 22-Nov 9 195 Pem-berton Studios, mixed-media groupexhibition.

Silk Purse Arts CentreWest Vancouver Community ArtsCouncil, 1570 Argyle Ave604-925-7292 www.silkpurse.catues-sun 12-5pm. Sep 3-22 AnnWillsie and Jeff Wilson, “Leavesand Tides”, exploring the light andcolour of the western Canadian land-scape from two very different per-spectives; Sep 24-Oct 13 Explo-rations in Pencil, group show fea-tures works rendered entirely incoloured pencil; Oct 15-Nov 3 Nass-er Ghaderi and Therese Joseph,“Colour Burst”, abstract and figura-tive paintings.

Sun Spirit Gallery2444 Marine Dr778-279-5052 www.sunspirit.catues-sat 10am-5pm. Sun SpiritGallery offers a superior collectionof West Coast Native and Inuit artfrom renowned and emerging artists.

West Vancouver Museum680 17th St 604-925-7295 www.westvancouvermuseum.catues-sat 11am-5pm. Admission bydonation. Thru Sep 21 Ron Thom andthe Allied Arts, focuses on domesticarchitecture on the West Coast ofCanada in the 1950s and shows thedesign ethos developed then and latermanifested in Massey College andTrent University in Ontario.

Mountain Galleriesat the Fairmont Chateau4599 Chateau Blvd 604-935-1862 www.mountaingalleries.comopen 7 days a week. Thru Oct 6Whistler Farmers Market, artistdemonstrations every Sunday, a dif-ferent Mountain Galleries artist willshowcase his/her talents.

Squamish Lil’watCultural Centre4584 Blackcomb Way866-441-7522 www.slcc.camon wed-sun 9:30am-5pm tues9:30am-8pm. Thru Oct Pieces ofOur Past, newest exhibition containssome of our most significant spiritu-al and cultural pieces, some createdand used by our ancestors over3,000 years ago.

White Rock Gallery1247 Johnston Rd 604-538-4452 877-974-4278www.whiterockgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm sun 12-5pm,closed holiday weekends. Rotatingexhibitions of gallery artists MickieAcierno, Pietro Adamo, ConstanceBachmann, Beverley Binfet, NicholasBott, Larry Bracegirdle, Phil Buy-tendorp, Claudette Castonguay,Rod Charlesworth, Steve Coffey, Car-ol Evans, Susan Flaig, Mark Fletcher,Robert Genn, Sara Genn, TerryGilecki, Laura Harris, HeatherHaynes, Paul Healey, Keith Hiscock,Vladan Ignatovic, H.E. Kuckein,Dongmin Lai, David Langevin, LouiseLauzon, Raynald Leclerc, Don Li,Don Li-Leger, Min Ma, Ingrid Mann-Willis, Danny McBride, Renato Muc-c i l lo , J im Nede lak , Michae lO’Toole, Niels Petersen, James Pos-till, Alejandro Rosemberg, Robert P.Roy, Bill Saunders, Michael Stock-dale, Mike Svob, Linda Thompson,Christopher Walker, Ray Ward, AlanWylie, Peter Wyse and Donna Zhang,paintings; Marilyn Armitage, MichaelHermesh, Helene Labrie and NicolaPrinsen, sculpture; Bill Boyd, LaurieRolland and Geoff Searle, pottery. Oct4-11 Phil Buytendorp, Steve Coffey,Renato Muccillo and Donna Zhang,“Elements: Fall 2013”, new paintings.

WEST VANCOUVER

WHISTLER

WHITE ROCK

66 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

Kevin Tolman, Botanical, acrylic on canvas[Gallery Jones, Vancouver BC, Sep 4-28]

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� Station House Gallery1 N MacKenzie Ave 250-392-6113 www.stationhousegallery.common-sat 10am-5pm. Sep 6-28 CarinCovin, “Monuments”; Sandra Hayes-Gardiner, “One Life”; Oct 4-26 LyndaSawyer, Kathryn Steen and GladysWheatley, “The Lynch Mob”; JennyWolpert, “Wild and Wonderful”.

OREGON

Cannon Beach Gallery1064 S Hemlock 503-436-0744 www.cannonbeacharts.orgthurs-mon 10am-4pm. Sep 7-30 StillLives: A Fundraiser, 12”x12” artworkin all media by Oregon artists on thetheme of “still lives”; Oct 4-28 “Shad-ow and Light”, group show curated by

featured artist Susan C. Walsh.

Cannon Beach Gallery Groupwww.cbgallerygroup.comThe 12 member galleries offer artworkfrom contemporary to classical, withspecial events including new exhibi-tions and demonstrations. See web-site for information about individualgalleries, featured artists and events.

� Northwest By NorthwestGallery

232 N Spruce (downtown acrossfrom city park and info centre)503-436-0741 800-494-0741www.nwbynwgallery.comdaily 11am-6pm and by appt. Sep-Oct Steve Jensen, glass boats andpaintings on cedar; Georgia Gerber,new bronze sculptures; ChristopherBurkett, fine art photography.

White Bird Gallery251 N Hemlock St 503-436-2681 www.whitebirdgallery.comdaily 11am-5pm. Thru Sep 15 Ken

Grant, new paintings – interior architec-ture, light/shadow and still life subjects;Randall Tipton, new paintings – naturescenes that lean toward a surreal, oth-erworldly view; Jeremy Newman andAllison Ciancibelli, glass sculpture –subtle forms with delicate landscape-inspired details; Oct Autumn GroupShow, cross-section of works bygallery artists including oil paintings,glass sculpture, contemporary ceram-ics, printmaking, art jewellery andmixed media.

The Art Gym atMarylhurst University17600 Pacific Hwy 503-699-6243 800-634-9982www.marylhurst.edutues-sun 12-4pm. Admission is free.Oct 7-Dec 8 Fernanda D’Agostino:The Method of Loci, projected videoand sculpture – unconventional ret-rospective for Oregon-based artist.

WILLIAMS LAKE

CANNON BEACH

MARYLHURST

68 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

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V I G N E T T E S • September/October 2013Oregon aLLyn cantoR

ISAAC LAYMAN: FUNERAL Elizabeth Leach Gallery, Portland, Aug 1-Sep21 Seattle artist Isaac Layman portrays seemingly mundane domes-tic objects in minimalist photographic compositions that are com-pelling in their detail. He obtains his large-scale works by digitallycompiling several photographs of the same image many times. Theresults have a stunning sense of heightened reality while pointing toan emptiness inherent in domesticity. These immaculately stoicimages consider loss and transition in order to negotiate the cycles ofexistence and acceptance.

ERIC STOTIK Laura Russo Gallery, Portland, Sep 5-28 For the past twoyears, Eric Stotik has been creating an ambitious 45-foot paintingconsisting of 11 panels. This impeccable work, by an artist known forhis smaller-scale representations of mysterious human and animalsubjects in dreamlike settings, acts as a continuum where time seemsto be obscured. With a Bosch-like sense of surrealism, Stotik’s com-pelling narration makes one ponder the darker side of reality, innermindscapes, and the relation of those things to the natural world.

JACOB PANDER AND MARNE LUCAS: INCIDENT ENERGY Disjecta Con-temporary Art Center, Portland, Sep 20-Oct 13 This collaborativeeffort between Jacob Pander and Marne Lucas uses thermal-basedimaging in a multi-channel video installation to capture the essenceof human moments within culture and nature. The black-and-whitefootage reveals brightly lit forms created by the heat of bodies andsurrounding objects, while rich blacks are the cold, void spaces. Theeffect is luminous and captivating, evoking a perception of self that isakin to the ancient energy of stars. During the opening reception, alive performance by choreographer Jim McGinn will be silhouettedagainst the image projections.

JACOB LAWRENCE: AESOP’S FABLES Hallie Ford Museum of Art,Salem, Aug 3-Oct 27 Jacob Lawrence, widely regarded as one of themost important African-American artists of the 20th century, createdthis group of 23 original drawings for Simon & Schuster in the late1960s. The collection depicts morality tales from the late 7th andearly 6th century BCE by Greek storyteller Aesop. Lawrence’s signa-ture style of bold figuration is pared down to black-and-white narra-tives of animals, insects and birds meant to teach lessons. The elegantillustrations are accompanied by the stories they represent.

FERNANDA D’AGOSTINO: THE METHOD OF LOCI The Art Gym at Maryl-hurst, Oct 7-Dec 8 During her 30-year career, Fernanda D’Agostinohas completed many installations and large-scale public art projectsthat incorporate personal, societal and environmental concerns. Forthis exhibit, she has redesigned the Art Gym into dramatic spaces thatelicit inner memory. Drawing from current and past work, this showacts as an unconventional retrospective: the method of loci is anancient system of remembering points along an imaging journey.D’Agostino’s use of digital and interactive media in combination withsculptural ideas always yields a highly resonant experience.

Jacob Lawrence

Isaac Layman

Erik Stotik

Fernanda D’Agostino

Jacob Pander/Marne Lucas

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� Blackfish Gallery420 NW 9th Ave 503-224-2634 www.blackfish.comtues-sat 11am-5pm. Sep 3-28 LyndaAter, “Rickrack”, paintings – acrylicand paper collage on birch panels;Sue Tower, “Unconscious Spirits”,black and white geometric abstractoil on canvas paintings; Oct 2-26 ToriBryer, “Garden Variety”, monotypes;Christopher Shotola-Hardt, “BirdIssues”, acrylic paintings.

� Charles A. Hartman Fine Art134 NW 8th Ave 503-287-3886 www.hartmanfineart.netwed-sat 10:30am-5:30pm. Sep 4-28Eva Speer, “Alone Together”.

Disjecta Contemporary Art Center8371 N Interstate Ave 503-266-9449www.disjecta.orgfri-sun 12-5pm or by appt. Sep 20-Oct 13 Jacob Pander and MarneLucas, “Incident Energy”.

Douglas F Cooley Memorial ArtGallery, Reed College3203 SE Woodstock Blvd503-517-7851 www.reed.edu/gallerytues-sun 12-5pm. Thru Oct 20 JamieIsenstein: Will Return.

� Elizabeth Leach Gallery417 NW 9th Ave (at Flanders)503-224-0521 www.elizabethleach.comtues-sat 10:30am-5:30pm and byappt. Sep 5-21 Michael Lazarus,“Recent Works”, new paintings con-structed from found materials, includ-ing paint, lettering, and commercialsignage; Thru Sep 21 Isaac Layman,“Funeral”, photographic constructionsand curated objects; Sep 26-Nov 2Dinh Q. Lê, “Fixing the Impermanent”,new works that consider the Buddhistidea of impermanence through photo-graphic means.

� Laura Russo Gallery805 NW 21st Ave 503-226-2754 www.laurarusso.comtues-fri 11am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm. Sep 5-28 Eric Stotik, “NewWork”, a continuous painting that is5x45 ft, with no defined beginning orend, presenting a dreamlike narrativeinterspersed with wonder and horror;Anne Siems, “Ceremony”, a world ofrites and rituals is explored in which

ephemeral figures and animalsengage in practices that were inspiredby Siems’s recollections of her child-hood in South America; Oct 3-Nov 2Tom Cramer, “New Work”; SherrieWolf, “Stills – New Paintings”.

� Museum ofContemporary Craft

724 NW Davis St 503-223-2654 www.museumofcontemporarycraft.orgtues-sat 11am-6pm and by appt, firstthurs 11am-8pm. Thru Sep 21 ObjectFocus: The Bowl, Engage + Use, inves-tigates the processes of making, usingand living with bowls; “Soundforge”,multi-media installation, the result of atwo-year collaboration between metal-smith Gabriel Craig and composerMichael Remson; Oct 2-Jan 11 TheTool at Hand, contemporary artistsfrom the US and UK created a work ofart with one tool alone – includes the fin-ished works, the tools together withshort videos produced by each artist;Thru Jan 18 John Economaki andBridge City Tool Works, “Quality is Con-tagious”, heirloom hand tools for wood-workers, sketches and tools from thepast 30 years, accompanied by interac-tive programming in The Lab.

Oregon Jewish Museum1953 NW Kearney St503-226-3600 www.ojm.orgtues-thurs 10:30am-4pm fri 10:30am-

3pm sat-sun 1-4pm. Thru Sep 29 Set-tling In examines the experience andacculturation of immigrants to Oregon,with focus on Eastern European andRussian Jewish immigrants who wereAmericanized through the Neighbor-hood House founded in South Portlandin 1905; Oct 9-Jan 5 Meditations onEquilibrium: Works in Glass andPaper by Alex Hirsch, delicate works offused art glass and studies of the piecesthat evoke the ephemeral feel of naturalsettings, and suggest an internal life indialogue with the natural world; Oct 9-Jan 26 Bat Mitzvah Comes of Age, pho-tographs, stories, audio clips, and more,that illustrate the determination of girls,their parents and their rabbis to changecommunal values and practices in thisnow widely-performed Jewish ritual.

Portland Art Museum1219 SW Park Ave 503-226-2811 www.portlandartmuseum.orgtues, wed, sat 10am-5pm, thurs & fri10am-8pm, sun 12-5pm. Admission:members free, adults $15, seniors(55+) and students (18+ with ID) $12children (17 and under) free. OpensSep 5 The Question of Hope: RobertAdams in Western Oregon, 70 photo-graphs demonstrate Adams’s rever-ence for the region’s limited naturalresources; Opens Sep 21 Contempo-rary Northwest Art Awards 2013 fea-tures the Northwest’s finest artists;now in its third year, with a $10,000prize; Opens Oct 5 Samurai! Five cen-turies of metallurgic evolution in thisexhibit’s only West Coast appearance;Thru Nov 17 Ed Ruscha, “Cover toCover” illuminates the integral role ofbooks in Ruscha’s artistic practice.

Hallie Ford Museum of Art700 State St 503-370-6855 www.willamette.edu/hfma/artstues-sat 10am-5pm sun 1-5pm. ThruOct 27 Jacob Lawrence: Aesop’sFables, 23 drawings on loan from thePaul G. Allen Family Collection; ThruDec 22 Breath of Heaven, Breath ofEarth: Ancient Near Eastern Art fromAmerican Collections, objects thatevoke the divine, human and animalrealms in the art and cultures of theancient Near East; David Roberts:Travels in the Holy Land, a selectionof hand-coloured lithographs by this19th C. Scottish artist and traveller.

PORTLAND

SALEM

70 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

Cannon BeachGallery Group UPCOMING ART EVENT:27th Annual Stormy WeatherArts Festival – weekend ofNovember 1 - 3Cannon Beach’s art community gatherseach November to collectively cele-brate diverse talents during this popu-lar festival. Galleries, shops, hotels andrestaurants host a variety of visual art,music, and theatre. This full weekendincludes a Friday Night "Quick Draw,"new exhibitions, gallery demonstra-tions, and receptions. Visit the websitefor detailed information about individ-ual galleries, featured artists, exhibi-tions and events.http://cbgallerygroup.com

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Exhibition Catalogues of InterestMAIN STREET: TOWNS, VILLAGES AND HAMLETS OF THE GREAT PLAINSencompasses the epic project of colour photographs that Danny Singer hasundertaken across the Canadian and American Prairies. Using digital technologyto seamlessly stitch his images together into extended panoramas, he depicts theentire progression of buildings along each main street of each community he hasvisited. In all seasons and all weather conditions, Singer creates a powerful senseof place – and of the character of the small towns at the centre of the North Amer-ican continent. Published by George F. Thompson, with an essay by Grant Arnold.Hardcover with slipcase, 140 pages, $75 USD. Available through Gallery Jones,604-714-2216 or at www.internationalpubmarket.com

EMILY CARR COLLECTED presents 120 paintings, drawings, oil sketches andwatercolours from the important holdings of the Vancouver Art Gallery. The booktraces Carr’s development from the tentative landscapes, still lifes and figurestudies of her early adulthood, through her travels to isolated First Nations com-munities and her exposure to Post-Impressionism in France, and finally to theconfident paintings of the West Coast rainforest she executed during late middleage and the transcendent images of open spaces and godly light she accom-plished in her last years. Published by Douglas & McIntyre.Softcover, 152 pages, $19.95 CAD. Available at the Vancouver Art Gallery Store,604-662-4706, and www.douglas-mcintyre.com

BRATSA BONIFACHO 1973–2013: 40 YEARS IN VANCOUVER is a richly illus-trated, large-format, retrospective view of this West Coast artist’s career. The bookstarts with Bonifacho’s most recent series and ends with documentation of ahigh-profile rooftop performance in Belgrade in the 1960s. Experiments withAbstract Expressionism, Pop Art and Neo-Expressionism lead, backwards, toserial canvases richly layered with gestures, signs and symbols. Words, phrases,letters, numbers, punctuation marks and reductive images of animals, plants andhuman figures allude to a range of contemporary concerns, from computer virus-es to genetic manipulation. Introduction by Ann Rosenberg and contributionsfrom a range of critics and curators. Hardcover, 336 pages, $160 CAD. Available in Vancouver at the Bau-Xi Gallery,604-733-7011, and in Seattle at the Foster/White Gallery, 206-622-2833

BREATH OF HEAVEN, BREATH OF EARTH: ANCIENT NEAR EASTERN ARTFROM AMERICAN COLLECTIONS was published to accompany the current Hal-lie Ford Museum of Art exhibition of ancient objects and artworks from approxi-mately 500 BCE to 6,000 BCE. The lavishly illustrated book explores geographicregions of Mesopotamia, Syria and the Levant, Anatolia and Iran. Authors TrudyKawami and John Olbrantz examine cultural themes as well as how the growthof Near Eastern art collections came about in America.Hardcover, 192 pages, $34.95 USD. Available at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Salem, OR,503-370-6855

BEYOND BOOKS: THE INDEPENDENT ART OF ERIC CARLE explores the broadrange of Eric Carle’s talents through dozens of full-page colour reproductions ofhis personal studio work and lesser-known design projects dating from the earlypart of his career in the 1950’s to the present. Carle is widely recognized for hisbook illustrations in a colourful collage technique. Published for the recent Taco-ma Art Museum survey of his work, the catalogue includes an essay by GraceGlueck and an exclusive DVD.Softcover, 72 pages, $28.95 USD. Available at Tacoma Art Museum Store, Tacoma, WA,253-272-4258

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WASHINGTON

Bainbridge IslandMuseum of Art550 Winslow Way 206-842-4451 www.biartmuseum.orgdaily 10am-6pm. Thru Sep 22 Selec-tions from the Permanent Art Col-lection; Barbara Helen Berger:Vision Revealed; Margie McDon-ald: Sea ’scape; First Light: Region-al Group Exhibition; Opens Oct 12Gayle Bard: A Singular Vision;Selections from the Permanent ArtCollection; Richard Jesse Watson:Inner Zoo, Outer Orbit; Thru Jan2014 Artist’s Books and Art Jewelry;Heikki Seppa, Master Metalsmith.

Bellevue Arts Museum510 Bellevue Way NE 425-519-0770 www.bellevuearts.orgtues-sun 11am-5pm, free first fri11am-8pm. Thru Sep 22 2012 Out-standing Student Achievement inContemporary Sculpture Awards, cel-ebrating the innovative works of the 12recipients of the International Sculp-ture Center’s awards; Oct 10-Jan 19Telling Tales: Narrative Works byNate Steigenga, Cappy Thompson,and Anna Torma, working within theboundaries of their chosen media, col-lage for Steigenga, fibre for Torma, andglass for Thompson, each artist strivesto convey conversation or dialoguethrough the modulation and manipula-tion of purely visual components; ThruOct 27 Patti Warashina: Wit and Wis-dom, ceramics – retrospective span-ning her 50-year career; Thru Jan 31Rick Araluce: The Minutes, the Hours,the Days, conjuring stories with metic-ulously constructed miniature environ-ments and trompe l’oeil scenes.

Western GalleryFine Arts Complex, WWU333 32nd St, AC 114 360-650-3963 www.westerngallery.wwu.edu/mon-fri 10am-4pm wed 10am-8pmsat 12-4pm. Sep 30-Nov 22 LookingBack – Photography in the Seventies.

Whatcom MuseumOld City Hall, 121 Prospect StLightcatcher Building, 250 Flora St360-778-8930 www.whatcommuseum.orgLightcatcher: wed-sun 12-5-pm thur12-8pm sat 10am-5pm, Old City Hall:thurs-sun 12-5pm. LIGHTCATCHER BUILD-ING Thru Sep 22 Clearly Art: The Beau-ty of Glass, the medium of glass fromtraditional to radical; Nature in the Bal-ance: Artists Interpreting ClimateChange, Pacific Northwest artistsrespond to themes from the upcomingexhibition “Vanishing Ice”.

Schack Art Center2921 Hoyt Ave 425-259-5050 www.schack.orgmon-fri 10am-6pm sat 10am-5pmsun 12-5pm. Thru Sep 21 Genera-tions: James Madison highlights thecareer of Tulalip Tribes artist Madisonwho uses a contemporary approachto create traditional Salish and TlingitNorthwest Coast Native Art; Oct 8-Nov 8 A Glass Canvas features worksby the 2012 Pilchuck EmergingArtists in Residence program in part-nership with Pilchuck Glass School,curated by Traver Gallery.

WaterWorks Gallery315 Argyle St 360-378-3060 www.waterworksgallery.comtues-sun 10am-5pm. Thru Sep 14“Water, Stone & the Woods”, TomSmall, stone, wood and glass sculp-ture; Randall Tipton, abstractedlandscape paintings; Sep 21-Oct 12

Dana Roberts, abstract dress paint-ings; Matthew Gray Palmer, mixed-media sculptures.

Museum of Northwest Art121 S First St 360-466-4446 www.museumofnwart.orgGalleries and Museum Store: sun-mon 12-5pm tues-sat 10am-5pm.Admission: $8 adults, $5 seniors, $3students, members and youth under12 free. Thru Sep 29 Reflec-tions: Selections from the Perma-nent Collection combines new acqui-sitions and figurative works of art; Oct5-Jan 5 Ric Gendron: Rattlebone,more than 30 years of vibrant and lyri-cal paintings and prints by Spokaneartist Gendron; Geology from thePermanent Collection, multidis-ciplinary pairing of science and art.

Port Angeles Fine Arts Center1203 E Lauridsen Blvd360-457-3532 www.pafac.orgthurs-sun 11am-5pm, Webster’sWoods Art Park: open all daylighthours. Admission is free. Sep 19-Nov 3 Trisha Hassler, “PersonalTruth”, mixed media and textiles;Ongoing Art Outside, new installa-tions – 14th season of the enchanti-ng WEBSTER’S WOODS ART PARK, one ofthe most distinctive outdoor artexperiences in the Northwest, morethan 100 works on five acres andmany woodland trails.

� Artforte Gallery307 Occidental Ave S 206-748-0187 www.artforte.comtues-sat 11am-5:30pm sun-mon 12-5pm. Sep 5-Oct 2 Sharika Roland,Jim Walsh, Linzy Arnott, RhondaHill and Paula Blackwell, “EarlyAutumn”; Oct 3-Nov 6 Aaron Cole-man, Tanya Slingsby and ValerieStuart, “Color Field”.

Canlis Glass329-3131 Western Ave206-282-4428 www.canlisglass.comtues-fri 12-6pm sat 11am-3pm andby appt. Nestled in the Northwest

BELLINGHAM

EVERETT

FRIDAY HARBOR

LA CONNER

PORT ANGELES

SEATTLE

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

BELLEVUE

72 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

Roger Shimomura, Japanese Imposter(2009), acrylic on canvas [Greg KuceraGallery, Seattle WA, Aug 22-Sep 28]

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Work Lofts, this 3,000 sq ft inde-pendent showroom and studio isdedicated to the glass artwork of J.P.Canlis. Currently exhibiting Canlis’spopular Ocean Studies series, com-plemented by his large-scale Wheatand Bamboo installations.

� Davidson Galleries313 Occidental Ave S, Pioneer Square206-624-7684 www.davidsongalleries.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm. Sep 6-28 EtsukoIchikawa: Echo at Satsop (The EchoSeries), one sound installation, 2-D and3-D pyrographs and aquagraphs, and ashort film are inspired by the recenttragedies in Japan. Includes sound andvideo collected during her time at Sat-sop, the decommissioned nuclear plantat Elma, WA; Adrienne Sherman: Mys-terieux, new oil paintings continue toexplore the relationship of man to beast;Douglas Bosley: Artificial Life in theAutonomous Republic, recent mezzo-tints focus on a colony of micro-robotsliving in the Grand Range area; “GermanExpressionist Prints”, feature works byMax Beckmann, Max Pechstein, KarlSchmidt-Rotluff and Kaethe Kollwitz;Oct 4-Nov 2 Ben Butler: Propogation,organic forms built on a grid system,large and medium-scale sculpture instal-lations and a series of delicate graphitedrawings; Eunice Kim: New CollographMonoprints, non-toxic processes areused in the production of monoprints;“20th Century American Printmakers”,works by Grant Wood, John Steuart Cur-ry, Winslow Homer, Thomas Hart Ben-ton and John Sloan.

� Foster/White Gallery220 3rd Ave S, Pioneer Square 206-622-2833 www.fosterwhite.comtues-sat 10am-6pm. Sep 5-28 Dar-lene Cole, Allison Collins and DavidAlexander, “The Great Outdoors”,artists explore the theme of the out-door environment; Oct 3-31 RachelDenny, “Outside In”, whimsical mul-ti-dimensional sculpture inspired bynatural elements and news mediastories with assembled hand-knittedsweaters, pennies and recycled mate-rials over life-sized animal forms.

Francine Seders Gallery6701 Greenwood Ave N206-782-0355www.sedersgallery.comtues-sat 11am-5pm sun 1-5pm and byappt. Sep 13-Oct 5 Jacob Lawrence

and Michael Spafford; Sep 19-Oct 12Emily Gherard, drawings; Oct 15-Nov2 UPSTAIRS Eduardo Calderón (in con-junction with show on Peru at the Seat-tle Art Museum).

� Frye Art Museum704 Terry Ave 206-622-9250 www.fryemuseum.orgtues-sun 11am-5pm thurs 11am-7pm.Admission is free. Thru Oct 13 BusterSimpson // Surveyor, survey of workby a Seattle artist renowned as a pio-neer of site-specific, process-driven,environmental art and for his ground-breaking contribution to dialogues

about civic responsibility, ecology andthe role of public art; The HudsonFlows West explores how the notion ofmanifest destiny informed depictionsof the pristine beauty of the HudsonRiver Valley to the earliest images ofthe western frontier; paintings fromthe Frye’s holdings and loans fromSeattle private collections; Sep 21,2013-2014 Frye Salon, a restaging ofthe founding collection as it wasinstalled in the home gallery of Charlesand Emma Frye, activated by a seriesof episodes; Sep 21-Oct 20 Episode 1,Joshua Kohl, sound installation bycomposer Kohl; Episode 2, Mark

� OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS PREVIEW 73

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Mitchell: Burial, addresses ceremonyand tribute, transformation andrelease, presents designed ensemblesto clothe the dead.

� G. Gibson Gallery300 S Washington St 206-587-4033 www.ggibsongallery.comwed-sat 11am-5pm and tues by appt.Thru Oct 5 Diem Chau, “A-Z: North-west Natives”, new crayon and pencilsculptures; Gala Bent, “The Ether andMantle”, new drawings and paintings;Oct 18-Nov 23 Lori Nix, “The City”,new diorama photographs.

� Gallery 110110 3rd Ave S 206-624-9336www.gallery110.comwed-sat 12-5pm. Sep 5-28 MAINGALLERY Ryan Doran, “Urban Osteolo-gy”, urban graffiti-style stencil workmixed with exaggerated scientific

illustration. Doran explores functionand form of a subject in motionthrough its underlying skeletal struc-tures; SMALL GALLERY Aaron Brady,“City Transformations”, ink andgraphite drawings that explore thedepiction of bus commuters, first cap-tured with video, then line and finallytransformed with washes; Oct 3-Nov 2MAIN GALLERY Fab Rideti, “PerfectFamilies”, photographs that under-score the multiplicity of the family facevia the literary vehicle of the sevendeadly sins; SMALL GALLERY Descrip-tions, exploration of portraiture bygallery artists in all media and styles.

� Greg Kucera Gallery212 3rd Ave S 206-624-0770www.gregkucera.comtues-sat 10:30am-5:30pm. Thru Sep28 Roger Shimomura, “An AmericanKnockoff”, paintings; Léonie Guyer,

“Night walks on night”, drawings;Lynne Woods Turner, paintings; Oct3-Nov 16 Deborah Butterfield,sculpture.

� Henry Art GalleryUniversity of Washington206-543-2281 www.henryart.orgwed 11am-4pm thurs-fri 11am-9pmsat-sun 11am-4pm. Admission:adults $10, seniors $6, members,children under 13, UW students, fac-ulty, staff, high school and collegestudents with ID free, thurs 11am-8pm free. Sep 7-Jan 5 Camera Nip-ponica: Photographs from Japan,1880-1930, culled primarily from theHenry’s permanent collections, aswell as University of WashingtonLibraries, Special Collections; ThruSep 15 Paul Laffoley: Premonitionsof the Bauharoque, works from 1965to the present of densely layered

74 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

www.biartmuseum.org�

First Light: Regional Group ExhibitionBAINBRIDGE ISLAND MUSEUM OF ART, BAINBRIDGE ISLAND, WA – June 14-Sep 22, 2013The new Bainbridge Island Museum of Art (BIMA) opened its doors to the public this summer with sev-eral exhibitions, highlighting art from the Kitsap and Olympic Peninsulas, as well as art from the greaterPuget Sound area. The largest and most diverse of its inaugural exhibitions, First Light, encompasses themuseum’s mission to emphasize artists and artwork from western Puget Sound. Museum director GregRobinson invited six regionalcurators – Jake Seniuk, MaxGrover, Janice Shaw, CynthiaSears, Norie Sato and BarbaraEarl Thomas – to plan theexhibit together.

Sixty artists were selectedto be part of the exhibition.Among them are well-knownartists such as the Anacortes-based Lanny Bergner, nation-ally recognized for his large-scale wire mesh sculptures,and the Seattle mixed-mediaartist Marita Dingus, whocreates most of her workfrom repurposed materials.

Other Northwest art vet-erans represented in this show are painters Fay Jones and James Martin. Among the newer talent areartists such as Port Townsend’s Michael Paul Miller, whose articulately macabre paintings hauntinglydepict scenes of human desolation and fear.

As an institution, BIMA isn’t focusing just on established artists from around Puget Sound. Rather, inaddition to including lesser-known artists in this exhibit, the museum is ensuring that its future program-ming provides a foundation for emerging talent to grow with the right support and exposure. Allyn Cantor

First Light exhibition, installation view [Bainbridge Island Museum of Art, Bainbridge IslandWA, Jun 14-Sep 22]

PHOT

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www.preview-art.com PREVIEW 75

V I G N E T T E S • September/October 2013Washington aLLyn cantoR

PATTI WARASHINA: WIT AND WISDOM Bellevue Arts Museum, Belle-vue, Jul 12-Oct 27 When Patti Warashina got her start in the 1960s,most ceramic artists used stoneware and varied earth-tone glazes.Her aesthetic favoured white clay bodies and controlled, colourfulglazes. This large retrospective features over 120 pieces from 50years of Warashina’s career. Not only are her mostly figurative sub-jects innovative and immaculately crafted, but the curious pieces pos-sess a warm spirit, satirical humour and playfulness that resides in thesurreal while addressing the human condition.

CAMERA NIPPONICA: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM JAPAN, 1880-1930Henry ArtGallery, Seattle, Sep 7-Jan 5 This exhibit provides a compelling look atJapan’s photographic history. As the country ended a long period of iso-lation in the mid-1850s, port cities like Yokohama became gateways forforeigners, propelling the rise of commercial photography studios. Inthis show are stunning examples of the hand-coloured images of iconicscenery and genre subjects, souvenir albumen prints, and delicate glasslantern slides from the Meiji (1868–1912) and Taisho

_(1912-1926) eras

made for the Western tourist market. The show highlights a contrastingselection of vernacular portrait photography by mostly unknown Japan-ese photographers during the same period.

JAMES MADISON: GENERATIONS Schack Arts Center, Everett, Aug 15-Sep 21 A member of the Tulalip Tribes, sculptor James Madison grewup immersed in Salish art and culture. He began learning to carvefrom his grandfather, at the age of eight, and his father – an abstractpainter – encouraged Madison to embrace sculpting as well as carv-ing. His skillful pieces contain traditional Salish designs with a con-temporary approach to ideas and materials. Madison works in bronze,wood, glass and stainless steel. His pieces have been shown through-out Washington, as well as in New York, Alaska and Canada.

JAQ CHARTIER: SUBOPTIC Platform Gallery, Seattle, Sep 5-Oct 12Known for her paintings inspired by scientific imagery, Jaq Chartierpursues that direction in her new body of work, which stems from herinterest in landscape, biology, maps of Earth, weather and storms. Forthis exhibit, Chartier focuses on coral reefs. Her abstracted forms arecreated through a visual investigation that combines paint and stainson wood panels, reflecting the clustered patterns of sea life in reefs. Insome of these pieces, colours will intentionally fade in time, referenc-ing the environmental problem of mass coral bleaching.

RACHEL DENNY: OUTSIDE IN Foster/White Gallery, Seattle, Oct 3-31Through her warm sculptures of animal subjects, Rachel Dennyseeks to reconcile our human relationship to the natural world. Hersubjects have a static taxidermy-like quality, while the use of softfamiliar materials brings Denny’s sculptures to a very approachableand empathetic place. Colourful knit surfaces cover the entirety ofanimal forms, making them feel like part pop-culture objects andpart poignant symbols for the declining habitats where these animalslive and survive.

Jaq Chartier

James Madison

Camera Nipponica

Rachel Denny

Patti Warashina

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76 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

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Seattle Art Museum Presents SEATTLE ART EVENTFri. Sep. 20, 201310 am - 3 pm

Free & open to the public. Takes place at SAM downtown

Seattle Art Museum • 1300 First Ave, Seattle, WA • seattlemuseum.org • 206-625-8900

PARK(ing) Day: Sponsored by the Trust for Public Land and SAM downtown, parkingspots are hijacked and made into green space by feeding the meters and adding a fewmore square feet of turf to this green friendly city. Developed by Rebar, PARK(ing) Dayis a one-day global event in which artists, activists and citizens collaborate to transformparking spots into temporary public parks.

This year's PARK(ing) Day event is presented as part of the 2013 Seattle Design Festival.

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paintings by Boston-based visionaryartist; Sep 21-Jan 5 The Photographsof Ray K. Metzker retrospectiveincludes over five decades of work;David Hartt: Stray Light installation– a film projected in a room carpetedin the style of the film’s subject, theoffices of the Johnson PublishingCompany in Chicago, publisher ofthe iconic and influential African-American magazines Jet and Ebony,juxtaposed with interior photographsof the firm’s office spaces; Thru Sep29 The Ghost of Architecture, focus-ing on contemporary works thatinvoke architecture without citing itdirectly, from the permanent collec-tion in the last five years; Oct 19-Jan26 Jason Dodge sculptures – theartist will create a number of site-specific pieces; Oct 19-Feb 9Haegue Yang, the Korean-bornYang takes over the museum’sEast Gallery to construct site-specifictowers constructed with venetianblinds.

Linda Hodges Gallery316 1st Ave S 206-624-3034 www.lindahodgesgallery.comtues-sat 10:30am-5pm and by appt.Sep 5-28 Jennifer Beedon Snow,“New Paintings”, oil on board; Oct 3-Nov 30 Gaylen Hansen, “New Paint-ings”, acrylic on canvas.

� Lisa Harris Gallery1922 Pike Place 206-443-3315 www.lisaharrisgallery.common-sat 10:30am-5:30pm sun 11am-4pm. Sep 5-30 Double Dozen: Gallery

Artists Select Guests features 12gallery artists and 12 guest artists whopique their interest; provides fresh per-spectives captured through painting,photography and mixed media; Oct 3-Nov 4 Thomas Wood, “NorthwestLand, Sea and Sky”, day and nightrepresentations from La Push to Hart’sPass.

Platform Gallery114 Third Ave S 206-323-2808 www.platformgallery.comwed-fri 11am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm.Sep 5-Oct 12 Jaq Chartier, “SubOp-tic”, paintings and drawings; Oct 17-Nov 23 Ross Sawyers, photographs.

Prographica3419 E Denny Way 206-322-3851 www.prographicadrawings.comwed-sat 11am-5pm. Sep 14-Oct 19Two Painters: Kimberly Clark andLaura Swytak; Oct 26-Nov 30 ThreePhotographers: Ellen Garvens, Car-oline Kapp and Graham Shutt.

� Seattle Art Museum1300 First Ave 206-654-3100 www.seattleartmuseum.orgSAM hours: wed-sun 10am-5pm,thurs & fri 10am-9pm. Suggestedadmission: adults $15, seniors (62and over) and military (with ID) $12,students $9, children 12 & underfree, SAM members free. OlympicSculpture Park (2901 Western Ave)hours: open daily, open 30 minutesprior to sunrise, closed 30 minutesafter sunset. Free to the public. ThruSep 8 Future Beauty: 30 Years of

Japanese Fashion, nearly 100 gar-ments ranging from classic and ele-gant to outrageous; Oct 17-Jan 5Peru: Kingdoms of the Sun andMoon, rarely seen sculpture, metal-work, painting and textiles spanning3,000 years, including superb worksof the Mochica, Chimu and Inca cul-tures, important paintings and sculp-tures from the Colonial and Viceroyaleras; Thru Oct 27 The Dorothy andHerbert Vogel Collection: FiftyWorks for Fifty States. In 1962 HerbVogel, a New York City postal clerkand his wife Dorothy, a librarian,began to build what would become alegendary art collection. The Vogelsselected 50 works for one museum ineach of the 50 US states. The SeattleArt Museum is the beneficiary in thestate of Washington; Thru Nov 17Going for Gold features French bro-cades, Imperial Chinese robes,Japanese kesas, and Persian bedcov-ers as rich backdrops to other 3-Dobjects of beauty; Ongoing DougAitken, “Mirror Mirror”, installationfor the façade of SAM, an urbanearthwork.

� Seattle Asian Art Museum1400 E Prospect St, Volunteer Park206-654-3100 www.seattleartmuseum.orgwed-sun 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pm. Suggested admission: adults$7, seniors (62 and over), studentsand military $5, children 12 & underfree, SAM members free. First Thursfree admission. First Fri seniors free.First Sat families free. Thru Apr 13

� OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS PREVIEW 77

STARTING OUR 28TH YEAR

315 Argyle St, Friday Harbor360.378.3060

www.waterworksgallery.com

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Fuller View of China, Korea andJapan celebrates the 80th anniver-sary of SAM’s founding by Dr.Richard Fuller, showcasing worksthat Dr. Fuller personally collected,and art from his family, friends andmore recent donors, looking at thequality and diversity of the Asian artcollection; Thru Jun 29, 2014 Home-town Boy: Liu Xiaodong. The artistgrew up in a small industrial town inChina before moving to Beijing at age17 to study art. He masterfully cap-tures the details of daily life in a typi-cal Chinese town; Inked: Wan Qingli,features biting pictorial commen-taries on contemporary life and soci-ety. He was born in Beijing in 1945,and studied with some of the most

celebrated and innovative Chinese inkpainters of the past century.

� Shift Studio105-306 S Washington St, TashiroKaplan Bldg [email protected] & sat 12-5pm or by appt. NewLocation Sep 5: 312 S Washington St.Sep 5-28 Ted Hiebert, “ElectrocutingBabel”, images from Excerpts fromthe Library of Babel project, a seriesof images that uses Kirlian photogra-phy, an electricity-based photographicprocess, to take pictures from JorgeLuis Borge’s short story, “The Libraryof Babel”; New Location Shift Gallery,312 S Washington St Sep 5-28“Palimpsests I”, layers of textual

mark-making, process and materialitywith artists Ken Barnes, Daya B.Astor, Patrice Donohue, Dawn P.Endean, Adele Eustis, Pam Galvani,Jen Grabarczyk, Cynthia Hibbard,Ted Hiebert, Kamla Kakaria, EdMcCarthy, Cass Nevada, Ruthie V.,Carmi Weingrod, Kirsten Wilhelm,Lee Withington and Liz Patterson(curator); Oct 3-26 Patrice M. Dono-hue, “Revised & Revisited” expandsher exploration of using wax, paperand clay to build surfaces that conveya sense of holding and breakingthrough; Offsite WASHINGTON STATECONVENTION CENTER, LEVEL 2 NORTH GAL-LERIA, 800 CONVENTION PLACE Oct 10-Jan 8 Palimpsests II, layers of textualmark-making, process and materiality

78 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS

fryemuseum.org�

Buster Simpson //SurveyorFRYE ART MUSEUM, SEATTLE WA – June 15-Oct 13, 2013 Known for his public and often unconven-tional art projects, Seattle’s Buster Simpson has been at work since the late 1960s and early ’70s creating

socially driven, community-minded art. In both hisstreet art and large-scale sculptural pieces, Simpson’swork is meant to populate the shared space of dailylife and provoke change. The conceptual impact ofappropriating locally salvaged materials into artisticsolutions within changing urban neighbourhoods ispart of Simpson’s ecological message – a principle herefers to as “poetic utility.” Coming from the Viet-nam War generation of thinkers and doers, he hascarved a distinct creative and conscious niche that isvery much at the forefront of the public art move-ment.

This first museum retrospective of Simpson’sartistic output encapsulates about 40 years of hiswork, with emphasis on his early pieces. Documen-tation and video footage show some of Simpson’siconic performances and action-based projects. Forexample, he gained national media attention in the1980s for throwing large limestone discs into theHudson River headwaters in an attempt to neutral-ize the effects of acid rain. In downtown Seattle, hefocused on saving building remnants from demoli-tion sites, posing as “the Woodman.” This recurring

character appears in many of Simpson’s pieces as both a worker and a witness to the fallen façades ofmany old Seattle structures that were torn down to make way for new developments.

Other important site-based works were recreated in spirit for this survey, like the1983 interactiveinstallation at 90 Pine Street involving an old tavern, many glass beer bottles, and wind vanes pro-pelling the bottles and causing the glass to shatter. His infamous Shared Solar Clothesline, originallystrung up in 1978 between a fixed-income housing building and a condo high-rise in Post Alley, wasrestaged at the same location for this retrospective. Other outdoor pieces near the Frye Art Museum’sentrance tune visitors into the experiential quality of his public works. Allyn Cantor

Buster Simpson, The Crow’s Nest (1980), photo-documentation ofthe agitprop performance [Frye Art Museum, Seattle WA, Jun 15-Oct 13]

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pull together individual expressions oftracing time, meaning and place intoart.

SPAC GallerySeattle Pacific University3 W Cremona 206-281-2079 www.spu.edu/spac gallerymon-fri 9am-5pm. Oct 8-Dec 3 LiaChavez, Ariana Page Russell, MaggieCarson Romano, Zack Bent and KentAnderson Butler, “Hide and Seek: Pho-tography and the Body”, photographicworks exploring issues of vulnerability,shame, celebration and pride.

Northwest Museumof Arts & Culture2316 W First Ave 509-456-3931 www.northwestmuseum.orgMuseum: wed-sun 10am-5pm, firstfri 5-8pm by donation. Admission:adults $7, seniors/students $5, kids 5and under and MAC members nocharge. Campbell House Tours:included in admission price. ThruNov 3 Two to Tango: Artist and View-er, artworks spanning four centuries,from 300-year-old academic paint-ings to electronic assemblages, fromthe permanent collection; Thru Jan12 SPOMA: Spokane Modern Archi-tecture 1948-1973, highlighting the25 years when this region saw anunrivalled burst of architectural cre-ativity; Thru Jan 12 Lasting Heritage,

the most expansive American Indianinstallation to date at the MAC; ThruDec 31, 2016 Inland Northwest Nar-rative: Crossroads and Confluence,introduction to the Inland Northwestexperience from past to present, withselected museum collection images;Ongoing Campbell House Tours,hourly: wed-sun 12-4pm, beginningat Campbell House Activity Centerlocated in the Carriage House.

Museum of Glass1801 Dock St 253-284-4750 www.museumofglass.orgwed-sat 10am-5pm sun 12-5pm 3rdthurs 10am-8pm. Admission: freefor members, $12 adults, $10 sen-iors (62+), military and students(13+), $10 groups of 10+, $5 chil-dren 6-12 (under 6 are free), freeevery 3rd thurs from 5-8pm. Sep 25-Jan 12 An Experiment in DesignProduction: The Enduring Birdsof iittala; Thru Oct 20 BenjaminMoore: Translucent; Thru Oct 27Northwest Artists Collect; Thru Jan26 Links: Australian Glass and thePacific Northwest; Ongoing MAINPLAZA REFLECTING POOL Martin Blank:Fluent Steps, monumental glasssculpture spans the entire length ofthe 210 ft-long reflecting pool andrises from water level to 15 ft inheight; Cappy Thompson, “Gather-ing the Light”, installation of reverse-

painted story of MOG on glass in thegrisaille technique; Dante Marioni,“Vessel Display 2010”, blown andhot-sculpted glass.

Tacoma Art Museum1701 Pacific Ave 253-272-4258 www.TacomaArtMuseum.orgwed-sun 10am-5pm, 3rd thursday10am-8pm, free on 3rd thurs from 5-8pm. Admission: members free,adults $10, students/military/seniors(65+) $8, family $25 (2 adults + up to4 children under 18), children 5 andunder free. Thru Oct 6 Creating theNew Northwest: Selections from theHerb and Lucy Pruzan Collectiontraces the rapid evolution of North-west art from some of our mostbeloved local artists; Thru Oct 20Austere Beauty: The Art of Z. Vanes-sa Helder, radiating clear coloursthrough watercolours, Helder’s raretalent shines through in this firstmajor survey of her work; Thru Jan2014 Sitting for History, portraitsthat explain ways in which we createpublic identities and how those meth-ods have changed over time; Ongo-ing Chihuly: Gifts from the Artist,permanent collection of Chihulyglass, including more than 30 sculp-tures and drawings. Visitors canaccess the Ear for Art: Chihuly GlassCellPhone Tour anytime from any-where by calling 888-411-4220. Mapof audio stops throughout downtownTacoma is available online.

TACOMA

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82 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

221A 39Access Gallery 39Alberta Craft Council Gallery 16Alberta Printmakers’ Society and Artist Proof Gallery (A/P) 8Alcheringa Gallery 61Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art 26Amelia Douglas Gallery, Douglas College 30Arnold Mikelson Mind & Matter 38Art Beatus 39The Art Emporium 39Art Gallery at Evergreen Cultural Centre 24Art Gallery of Alberta 16Art Gallery of Calgary 10Art Gallery of Greater Victoria 61Art Gallery of St. Albert 20The Art Gym at Marylhurst University 68ARTE funktional 26Artemis Gallery 30Artforte Gallery 72Art Works Gallery 39Artists for Kids Gallery (see Gordon Smith Gallery) 31Arts Council Gallery of New Westminster 30Arts Off Main 42Arts Pacific Co-op Gallery 22Artspeak 42ArtStarts Gallery 42Ashpa Naira Gallery 61Audain Gallery 42Avenue Gallery 62Bainbridge Island Museum of Art 72Bau-Xi Gallery 43Beaty Biodiversity Museum 43Bellevue Arts Museum 72Bill Reid Gallery 43Blackfish Gallery 70Bluerock Gallery 8Britannia Art Gallery 46Buckland Southerst Gallery 66Bugera Matheson Gallery 18Burnaby Art Gallery 22Burnaby Arts Council (see Deer Lake) 22CAFCA: Café for Contemporary Art 30Campbell River Art Gallery 23Canlis Glass 72

Cannon Beach Gallery 68Cannon Beach Gallery Group 68Caroun Art Gallery 30Catriona Jeffries Gallery 46Centre A 46Chali-Rosso Art Gallery 46Charles A. Hartman 70Charles H. Scott Gallery 46Chilliwack Visual Artists Association 24Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives 48Choboter Fine Art 48Circle Craft Gallery 48CityScape Community Art Space, North Vancouver Community Arts Council 31CKG /Christine Klassen Gallery 10Cloudflower Clayworks 22Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery 48The Collectors’ Gallery 10Comox Valley Art Gallery 24Contemporary Art Gallery 49Craft Connection & Gallery 378 27Craft Council of BC 49The Cultch 49Daffodil Gallery 18Dales Gallery 62David Tycho Fine Art 50Davidson Galleries 73Deer Lake Gallery 22Deluge Contemporary Art 62Desert Eagle Fine Art 8Design by Brown The Gallery 10Diana Paul Galleries 10Disjecta Contemporary Art Center 70Doctor Vigari Gallery 50Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery 70Douglas Reynolds Gallery 50Douglas Udell Gallery, Edmonton 18Douglas Udell Gallery, Vancouver 50Dundarave Print Workshop and Gallery 51DRAW Gallery 36Eagle Spirit Gallery 51Elissa Cristall Gallery 51Elizabeth Leach Gallery 70Emily Carr Alumni Gallery 51English Bay Gallery 51

Equinox Gallery 51Esker Foundation 10Esplanade Art Gallery 20The Fazakas Gallery 51Federation Gallery 51Ferry Building Gallery 66Firehall Arts Centre Gallery 52The Fort Gallery 26Foster/White Gallery 73The Foyer Gallery, Squamish Public Library 37Framagraphic Framing Gallery 52Framed on Fifth 12Francine Seders Gallery 73Frye Art Museum 73G. Gibson Gallery 74Gallery 2, Grand Forks and District Art and Heritage Centre 26Gallery 110 74Gallery at the Mac 62Gallery Gachet 52Gallery in the Oak Bay Village 62Gallery Jones 52Gallery of BC Ceramics 52Geert Maas Sculpture Gardens & Gallery 26Glenbow Museum 12Goldmoss Gallery 37Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art 31The Graffiti Co. Art Studio/Gallery 31Granville Fine Art 53Greg Kucera Gallery 74grunt gallery 53Hallie Ford Museum of Art 70Hambleton Galleries 26Havana Gallery 53Heffel Fine Art Auction House 53Henry Art Gallery 74Herringer Kiss Gallery 12hfa contemporary 55Hot Art Wet City Gallery 55Howe Street Gallery 55Ian Tan Gallery 55Initial Gallery 55Inuit Gallery of Vancouver 55Jarvis Hall Fine Art 12Jay Senetchko 55

Alpha listing of galleries in this issue

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Jennifer Kostuik Gallery 55Jeunesse Gallery of Fine Arts 55Joyce Williams Antique Prints & Maps 56Kafka’s Coffee & Tea 56Kamloops Art Gallery 26Kariton Art Gallery & Boutique 20Katherine McLean Studio 56Kelowna Art Gallery 26Kimoto Gallery 56Kootenay Gallery 23Kozai Modern 56Kwantlen Art Gallery 38Landing Gallery Artists’ Co-op 38Langham Cultural Centre Gallery 26Lattimer Gallery 56Laura Russo Gallery 70Legacy Art Gallery 62Leighdon Studio Gallery 56Linda Hodges Gallery 77Lisa Harris Gallery 77The Lloyd Gallery 34Madrona Gallery 63Mairi Budreau (Kamloops Arts Council) 26Malaspina Printmakers Society 56Maltwood Prints and Drawings Gallery at the McPherson Library 63Maple Ridge Art Gallery 27Marion Scott Gallery 56Masters Gallery 56Metchosin Art Gallery 63Monny's Art Gallery 57Morley Myers Studio 37Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery 57Mountain Galleries 66Museum of Anthropology, UBC 57Museum of Contemporary Art – Calgary 12Museum of Contemporary Craft 70Museum of Glass 79Museum of Northern BC 36Museum of Northwest Art 72Museum of Vancouver 57Nanaimo Art Gallery 27The New Gallery (TNG) 14Newzones 14Nicole Steinbrecher (Investors Groups) 36Nikkei National Museum 22

Northwest By Northwest Gallery 68Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture 79The Old School House Arts Centre 36Open Space 63Or Gallery 57Oregon Jewish Museum 70Osoyoos Art Gallery 34Out of the Mist Gallery 63Oxygen Art Centre 27Pacific Home and Art Centre 57PAL(Performing Arts Lodge) Theatre 58Paul Kuhn Gallery 14Pendulum Gallery 58Peninsula Gallery 37Penticton Art Gallery 34Petley Jones Gallery 58Place des Arts 24Platform Gallery 77Polychrome Fine Art 63Port Angeles Fine Arts Center 72Port Moody Arts Centre 36Portland Art Museum 70Presentation House Gallery 31Prographica/fine works on paper 77The Reach Gallery Museum Abbotsford 22Red Art Gallery 65Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery 20Rennie Collection 58Republic Gallery 58Richard Roblin (Waterfall Bldg.) 60Richmond Art Gallery 36The Robert Bateman Centre 65Robinson Studio Gallery 58Royal BC Museum 65Rufus Lin Gallery of Japanese Art 36Salmon Arm Art Gallery 37Satellite Gallery 59Schack Art Center 72Seattle Art Museum 77Seattle Asian Art Museum 77Seymour Art Gallery 31Shift Studio 78Sidney and Gertrude Zack Gallery, Jewish Community Centre 59Silk Purse Arts Centre 66Simon Fraser University Gallery 22

Slide Room Gallery 65SMASH Gallery of Modern Art 59South Shore Gallery 37Southern Alberta Art Gallery 20SPAC Gallery 79SPACE emmarts 34Spirit Wrestler Gallery 59Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre 66Station House Gallery 68Stride Art Gallery Association 14Sun Spirit Gallery 66Sunshine Coast Arts Council, Doris Crowston Gallery 38Surrey Art Gallery 38Tacoma Art Museum 79Teck Gallery 59Toni Onley Estate 59Touchstones Nelson: Museum of Art and History 30Trench Contemporary Art 59TrépanierBaer 14Tsawwassen Longhouse Gallery 39Two Rivers Gallery 36UNIT/PITT Projects 59Unitarian Church of Vancouver 60University of Lethbridge Art Gallery 20Uno Langmann 60Vancouver Art Gallery 60Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre 60Vancouver Maritime Museum 60Vernon Public Art Gallery 61Wallace Galleries 14WaterWorks Gallery 72West End Gallery, Edmonton 18West End Gallery, Victoria 65West Vancouver Museum 66Western Gallery 72Whatcom Museum of History and Art 72White Bird Gallery 68White Rock Gallery 66Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies 8Wil Aballe Art Projects 60Winchester Galleries 65Winsor Gallery 60Xchanges Gallery 66

Alpha listing of galleries in this issue

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84 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

GALLERY OPENINGS + EVENTSSeptember 5 Thursday5-8pm Event: Killerwhale and Crocodile Reunion -Papua New Guinea Master Carver Teddy Balangureunites with fellow Killer Whale and Crocodilecarver John Marston for a reception and carvingdemonstration. ALCHERINGA GALLERY, 665 Fort St,Victoria BC.

5-9pm Opening reception: Sharika Roland, JimWalsh, Linzy Arnott, Rhonda Hill and Paula Blackwell,Early Autumn. ARTFORTE GALLERY, 307 Occidental AveS, Seattle WA.

6-8pm Opening reception: Jennifer Beedon Snow,New Paintings, oil on board. LINDA HODGES GALLERY,316 1st Ave S, Seattle WA.

6:30-8:30pm Opening reception: Miyuki Shinkai,glass installation; Jeff Wilson, realist acrylic paintings.DISTRICT FOYER GALLERY, NORTH VANCOUVER DISTRICT HALL, 355W Queens Rd, North Vancouver BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: Jonah Samson, Our Ladyof the Flowers of Evil, new works. WIL ABALLE ARTPROJECTS/WAAP, 528-2050 Scotia St, Buzzer 189,Vancouver BC.

September 6 Friday7-9pm Opening reception: Catherine Fraser, HighColour, new paintings - acrylic on canvas. ARTEMISGALLERY, 104C-4390 Gallant Ave, North VancouverBC.

8-11pm Opening reception: Sam Blanchard, Older& Overwhelmed, installation examines theperceived loss of ability that comes with aging. THENEW GALLERY (TNG), 208 Centre St SE, Calgary AB.

September 7 Saturday1-4pm Opening reception 2-4pm: Witnesses: Artand Canada’s Indian Residential Schools, worksarising from the history of residential schools;Performance 1-2pm Joane Cardinal-Schubert, TheLesson. MORRIS AND HELEN BELKIN ART GALLERY, UNIVERSITYOF BRITISH COLUMBIA, 1825 Main Mall, Vancouver BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: Keyvan Mahjoor, OfMyths and their Creators, pen and ink illustrationson paper. CAFCA: CAFÉ FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, 138-140 E Esplanade, North Vancouver BC.

8pm-1am Benefit: All proceeds go to ComicLegends Defense Fund for artists Jim Mahood, AveCrossland, Troy Nixey and Tyler Jenkins.Admission by donation. THE KOSMIK ZOO, 53 WBroadway, Vancouver BC.

September 11 Wednesday6-9pm Closing gala and Fundraising exhibition:Then and Now - Britannia Art Gallery’s 20thAnniversary, works by artists from the LowerMainland, Gulf Islands, Nelson, Penticton andCourtenay. BRITANNIA ART GALLERY, 1661 Napier St,Vancouver BC.

September 12 Thursday6-9pm Opening reception: NET-ETH: Going out ofthe Darkness, works by 20 First Nations artists.MALASPINA PRINTMAKERS SOCIETY, Granville Island, 1555Duranleau St, Vancouver BC.

6-9pm Opening reception: NET-ETH: Going out ofthe Darkness, works by 20 First Nations artists. AtEMILY CARR UNIVERSITY OF ART + DESIGN (ECUAD),Concourse Gallery, North Bldg, 1399 Johnston St,Vancouver BC.

7pm Opening reception: Maureen Faulkner, Cake: ATraveller’s Journey, recent artwork. TWO RIVERSGALLERY, 725 Civic Plaza, Prince George BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: The Art Rental Show,artwork available for rental or purchase. CITYSCAPECOMMUNITY ART SPACE, NORTH VANCOUVER COMMUNITY ARTSCOUNCIL, 335 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: Passing Through: Worksby Nicole Steinbrecher, acrylic and mixed media.Artist in attendance, sponsored by The InvestorsGroup. THE INVESTORS GROUP RICHMOND OFFICE #57,100-5811 Cooney Rd, Richmond BC.

September 13 Friday6-9pm Opening reception: NET-ETH: Going out ofthe Darkness, works by 20 First Nations artists. AtURBAN ABORIGINAL FAIR TRADE GALLERY (SKWACHAYS HEALINGLODGE), 29 W Pender St, Vancouver BC.

7-10:30pm Opening reception: Leef Evans, OneHundred Self-Portraits in One Hundred Days;Ariel Kirk-Gushowaty and Lisa Walker, SpanningTime: Coinciding Self-Portraits. GALLERY GACHET, 88 ECordova St, Vancouver BC.

September 14-15 Saturday & Sunday10am-4pm Event: The 1st Annual Alberni ValleyPaint Out 2013, artists will paint at variouslocations. Finishes Sep 15 4pm View the artworkand meet the artists at THE STARBOARD GRILL, HarbourQuay, 5440 Argyle St, Port Alberni BC, organizedby DRAW GALLERY in conjunction with theInternational Plein Air Painters (IPAP) 11th GreatWorldwide Paint Out.

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GALLERY OPENINGS + EVENTSSeptember 14 Saturday11am-1pm Opening reception: Samuel Roy-Bois:Not a new world, just an old trick, installation;11am – breakfast, mimosas and live Dvorak.SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY GALLERY, AQ 3004-8888University Dr, Burnaby BC.

1-5pm Opening reception: Tony Urquhart:Retrospective; Joseph Plaskett at 95 Years: ACelebration! WINCHESTER GALLERIES, 2260 Oak BayAve, Victoria BC.

2-4pm Opening reception: West Meets East: ThePataphysical Paintings of James K-M and Synn KuneLoh. CHINESE CULTURAL CENTRE MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES, 555Columbia St, Vancouver BC.

7pm Opening reception: Collected Shadows,Photographs from the Archive of Modern Conflict;Another Happy Day, Found Photographs from theCollection of Jonah Samson. Introductory tour7:30pm with Jonah Samson. PRESENTATION HOUSEGALLERY, 333 Chesterfield Ave, North Vancouver BC.

September 15 Sunday1-3pm Opening reception: Veronica Plewman andKristen Krimmel, recent paintings. THE FORT GALLERY,9048 Glover Rd, Fort Langley BC.

4-6pm Opening reception: Unreal, considers thediversity and innovation with which artistsexplore the many edges of reality. EVERGREENCULTURAL CENTRE, 1205 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam BC.

September 17 Tuesday6-8:30pm Artists’ talk: NET-ETH: Going out of theDarkness - Chris Bose, Lou-ann Ika-wega Neel andJerry Whitehead in discussion with curator TarahHogue. GATHERING PLACE, Granville Island, NorthBldg, behind 1399 Johnston St, Vancouver BC.

September 19 Thursday6-9pm Opening reception: Patrick Pettersson, largepaintings. Artist in attendance. JENNIFER KOSTUIKGALLERY, 1070 Homer St, Vancouver BC.

6-9pm Opening reception: David Marshall, To SeeFar, selected sculptures and sculptural drawings,complemented by a series of photographs by JeffWall. TRENCH CONTEMPORARY ART, 102-148 AlexanderSt, Vancouver BC.

September 20 Friday7-10pm Event: A Grand Opening – group exhibitionfeatures new works by gallery artists, eachavailable for $1,000. KIMOTO GALLERY, 1525 W 6thAve, Vancouver BC.

September 21 Saturday10am-12pm Opening reception: Deirdre Roberts,Quiet Mystery: Near and Far, new watercolours.At WINCHESTER GALLERIES, 796 Humboldt St, Victoria.

2-4pm Artists' panel: This is Not Pataphysical,with James K-M and Synn Kune Loh, moderatedby Toni McAfee. (Pataphysics is to metaphsics asmetaphysics is to physics - Alfred Jarry, 1873-1907) CHINESE CULTURAL CENTRE MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES,555 Columbia St, Vancouver BC.

2-4pm Opening reception: Christine Breakell-Lee, paintings evoke a spectrum of emotion. AtDISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY, LYNN VALLEY MAIN LIBRARY,1277 Lynn Valley Rd, North Vancouver BC.

September 24 Tuesday6-8pm Opening reception: Explorations in Pencil,group show features works rendered entirely incoloured pencil. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE AT THE WEST

VANCOUVER COMMUNITY ARTS COUNCIL, 1570 Argyle Ave,West Vancouver BC.

September 26-29 Thursday to Sunday9:30am on Event: Spirit Within Festival - 4-dayfestival celebrating modern and traditional FirstNations arts with workshops, kids' activities,performances and cuisine. Some events are free.Visit the website for information. SQUAMISH LIL'WATCULTURAL CENTRE, 4584 Blackcomb Way, Whistler.

September 26 Thursday5-9pm Opening reception: Masculine Intuition,Morley Myers, abstract sculptures; John King,abstract paintings. BUGERA MATHESON GALLERY, 12310Jasper Ave NW, Edmonton.

7pm Opening reception: The Navy: A Century inArt, paintings, produced by the Canadian WarMuseum; Virginia Ivanicki, Flight Worthy,paintings; A Community At War, local militaryartifacts and archival photos. THE REACH GALLERYMUSEUM ABBOTSFORD, 32388 Veterans Way,Abbotsford BC.

September 27 Friday7-10pm Event: Performance, Artist's talk, Livemusic and more: Jay Senetchko, Industry andthe Sleepwatchers, installation and paintings.Minimum donation $10, proceeds to supportSOLEFood Street Farms. After Sep 1 purchasetickets online at www.senetchko.ca JAY SENETCHKO,811 Carrall St (at Pacific), Vancouver BC.

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86 PREVIEW � SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

GALLERY OPENINGS + EVENTSSeptember 28 Saturday2-4pm Opening reception: 46th Annual FallShow, new acquisitions by gallery artists,Canadian historical collection, and fresh work byup and coming artists. DOUGLAS UDELL GALLERY,10332 124 St NW, Edmonton AB.

5-8pm Opening reception: Beau Dick, CoreyBulpitt, Phil Gray, Carlos Colin, Hal Schwarzeand Carole Landau, Story, group exhibition.Blessing ceremony and song by Beau Dick,musical performance by Neuman Mannas andWes Mack from Head of the Herd. THE FAZAKASGALLERY, 145 W 6th Ave, Vancouver BC.

September 29 Sunday3-5pm Opening reception in Main Lobby Space:Oliver Hockenhull, installation – projection andcreation of an intimate cinematic space. EVERGREENCULTURAL CENTRE, 1205 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam BC.

october 3 Thursday5-9pm Opening reception: Aaron Coleman, TanyaSlingsby and Valerie Stuart, Color Field. ARTFORTEGALLERY, 307 Occidental Ave S, Seattle WA.

6-8pm Opening reception: Lisa Maclean, UrbanPastoral; Wendy D, Scream; Tehya MacKenzie,Apoidea. THE CULTCH GALLERY, 1895 Venables St,Vancouver BC.

6-8pm Event: Reveal Yourself - PortraitShootings, Fab Rideti will create a photographicinstallation made of dual portraits of Arts Crushparticipants on the theme of duplicity, with aplayful approach. GALLERY 110, 110 3rd Ave S,Seattle WA.

6-8pm Opening reception: Gaylen Hansen, NewPaintings. LINDA HODGES GALLERY, 316 1st Ave S,Seattle WA.

october 4 Friday7-10pm Opening reception: Phil Buytendorp,Steve Coffey, Renato Muccillo and DonnaZhang, Elements: Fall 2013, new paintings. WHITE

ROCK GALLERY, 1247 Johnston Rd, White Rock BC.

october 5 Saturday2-4pm Opening reception: Danny Singer,photographs of small towns. GALLERY JONES, 1725W 3rd Ave, Vancouver BC.

4pm Auction: Through the Eyes of GordonAdaskin, paintings, sculptures and prints fromAdaskin's studio and private collection –-www.scartauction.ca. SUNSHINE COAST ARTS COUNCIL,DORIS CROWSTON GALLERY, 5714 Medusa St, Sechelt BC.

october 8 Tuesday5-7pm Opening reception: Lia Chavez, ArianaPage Russell, Maggie Carson Romano, ZackBent and Kent Anderson Butler, Hide and Seek:Photography and the Body. SPAC GALLERY, SEATTLEPACIFIC UNIVERSITY, 3 W Cremona, Seattle WA.

5:30pm Book launch and Panel discussion: MainStreet: Towns, Villages, and Hamlets of the GreatPlains with Danny Singer, Grant Arnold andGeorge F. Thompson (GFT Publishing). GALLERYJONES, 1725 W 3rd Ave, Vancouver BC.

october 9 Wednesday5:30-7:30pm Opening reception: Meditations onEquilibrium: Works in Glass and Paper by AlexHirsch; Bat Mitzvah Comes of Age. OREGON JEWISHMUSEUM, 1953 NW Kearney St, Portland OR.

october 10 Thursday7-9pm Opening reception: Scott Massey,Spectrum Studies. WIL ABALLE ART PROJECTS/WAAP,528-2050 Scotia St, Buzzer 189, Vancouver BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: Pushing Boundaries2013, contemporary artworks feature FirstNations artists. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE, 335Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver BC.

7:30pm Opening reception: Will Gill, Bloodredlife;Chosen: Works from Two Rivers GalleryPermanent Collection. TWO RIVERS GALLERY, 725Civic Plaza, Prince George BC.

october 15 Tuesday6-8pm Opening reception: Nasser Ghaderi andTherese Joseph, Colour Burst, abstract andfigurative paintings. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE, 1570Argyle Ave, West Vancouver BC.

Art Walks + ToursEdmonton Art Walk, October 19 & 20, noon-4pmPortland Pearl District: 1st Thursdays, 6-8pmPortland Alberta Street: 3rd Thursdays, 6-8pmSeattle Pioneer Square: 1st Thursdays, 6-8pmTacoma: 3rd Thursdays, 5-8pmWhistler ArtWalk 2013, July 1 to August 31Microsoft Art Collection Tours: open to thepublic, free admission, request reservation twoweeks ahead: [email protected]

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GALLERY OPENINGS + EVENTSoctober 17 Thursday5-9pm Opening reception: Ernestine Tahedl,Terra Incognita, abstract landscape paintings.BUGERA MATHESON GALLERY, 12310 Jasper Ave NW,Edmonton AB.

6-8pm Opening reception: David Burdeny,Dianne Bos, Catherine Nelson and JimKazanjian, Realiteit, photography. Artist's talk byDianne Bos. David Burdeny, Dianne Bos and JimKazanjian in attendance. JENNIFER KOSTUIK GALLERY,1070 Homer St, Vancouver BC.

october 18 Friday7-9pm Opening reception: Leonid Rozenberg,Liminal Means, mixed-media/assemblageinstallation. ARTEMIS GALLERY, 104C-4390 GallantAve, North Vancouver BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: Michael Love, TheLong Wait, photographs - documentation of the12 military bases in Germany occupied by NATOduring the Cold War era. CAFCA: CAFÉ FORCONTEMPORARY ART, 138-140 E Esplanade, NorthVancouver BC.

7-9pm Opening reception: invested/40,celebrates the work of artists who have dedicatedtheir lives to the crafts. CRAFT COUNCIL OF BC GALLERY,1386 Cartwright St, Vancouver BC.

7-10pm Opening reception: Un-tamed, newworks in sculpture, painting and installation by12 gallery artists. Artists in attendance. GOLDMOSSGALLERY, 2840 Lower Rd, Roberts Creek BC.

october 19 Saturday2-4pm Opening reception: Bratsa Bonifacho,Testament Papers, new canvases. BAU-XI GALLERY,3045 Granville St, Vancouver BC.

2-4pm Opening reception: Mel Yap, Theory andProblems, photography. KIMOTO GALLERY, 1525 W6th Ave, Vancouver BC.

october 24 Thursday6-8pm Opening reception: Stephen Foster,Re-mediating Curtis, interactive video andphotography installation; Sookinchoot YouthGroup. VERNON PUBLIC ART GALLERY, 3228 31st Ave,Vernon BC.

october 26 Saturday5:45-10pm Event: A Brush With Greatness – nightof food, wine, music and art. Guest speaker JoeFafard, music by Joel Fafard and an auction ofwork by many of Western Canada’s best knownpainters and sculptors. Cost: $125. ContactPENTICTON ART GALLERY for information. At POPLAR GROVEWINERY, 425 Middle Bench Rd N, Penticton BC.

TBA:13 Time-based Festival September 12-22 Info: pica-org/event/tba13Over 50 artists! Over 100 hours of performances! Over 1 month of projects!

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